• 2 days ago
Jhanel Ferreras, mercadólogo y experto en geopolítica, expresó este jueves que la "vuelta por México" como ruta migratoria hacia Estados Unidos, impulsada por el anhelo de cumplir "El sueño americano", ha generado un desorden migratorio. Estas opiniones fueron compartidas en el contexto de las políticas migratorias implementadas por Donald Trump.

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00:00🎵
00:30Simultaneously in our YouTube channel, Telematutino11RN.
00:33Then you can at any time of the day see the comments, the interviews.
00:38Also in the digital OI, you go and at the bottom are also the interviews of each day.
00:45And in my social networks too.
00:47We have a lot of topics.
00:49Let's see how we pack them in no more than 15 minutes.
00:54Our guest today is Mr. Janel Ferreras.
00:57He is a marketer, geopolitical expert, academic, diplomat, author of many books and works.
01:06Let's see, because there are many topics of interest, both internationally and nationally.
01:14Well, yesterday, former President Danilo Medina went to a program, RCC Media, El Sol de la Mañana.
01:23It had been years since the former president and president of the PLD attended a program.
01:29He dealt with the case of his brothers and said that his brothers are victims for being his brothers.
01:36No.
01:38The first mistake is that his brothers could not sell him to the state.
01:44It is true that this is not penal, as you said.
01:47But the purchase law establishes that there are certain ties of consanguinity,
01:52through which, if you are an official, your cousin, your brother, your wife, your son,
01:58cannot do business with the state.
02:01Much less the president's brothers.
02:04Now, to make that a criminal case, I don't get into that.
02:07There are some processes in which, in the end, it will be known if there was overvaluation,
02:13if there were preferences, if the purchase law was violated.
02:18But that is the reality.
02:21They are not imprisoned for being family.
02:23You may complain that they have only infiltrated your government,
02:27because they are not only your brothers.
02:30It is the former minister José Ramón Peralta.
02:33It is the former minister Gonzalo Castillo.
02:37They are his brothers-in-law who have not been promoted.
02:40There is even one of his brothers-in-law who has 3 billion pesos
02:44frozen in the Dominican financial system since 2020.
02:50So, things are not like that.
02:54On the other hand, there is an episode in history
02:58that was the call of Mike Pompeo, the Secretary of State of the United States,
03:04in the first government of Donald Trump.
03:08Pompeo called and talked to President Danilo Medina.
03:14And the next day, he spoke to the country,
03:17announcing that he was not going to change his stance,
03:21that he was not going to modify the Constitution,
03:24and that the internal process would be generated.
03:28Again, he says that Pompeo, what he told him was,
03:34that if you are going to do something, do it within the framework of legality.
03:39And he replied to Pompeo that he has always acted within the framework of legality.
03:45But we all lived that process.
03:50That was yesterday.
03:52Even Carlos Amarante amended the plan.
03:57Because let's remember the attempts to modify the Constitution.
04:02Let's remember Leónel Fernández in the esplanade of Congress.
04:09Let's remember the then-candidate,
04:13although he had not yet been a candidate,
04:16Luis Abinadera, making mobilizations.
04:19And it is true that he lacked the votes,
04:22but they were going to be bought, because that is done.
04:26Hippolyte Mejía made the constitutional modification in 2003.
04:35There were ten votes that were missing.
04:38Remember the deputy Botello, with a loudspeaker, denouncing.
04:47So, as Carlos Amarante says,
04:52the president called, long before all this,
04:55he called the aspirants.
04:57And he said, get out, I'm not going to aspire.
05:00But it's a lie.
05:01There were the rallies of the reelection
05:03and the rallies of the constitutional modification.
05:06And in that, even the business community joined.
05:10And many people who are now with Abinader
05:15joined that procession.
05:18But that is the reality.
05:21The modification did not occur because of something Mike Pompeo said.
05:26That is definitely the case.
05:30And Carlos Amarante says that then they saw the reality.
05:36All the support for Gonzalo Castillo.
05:38Let's remember that one of Gonzalo Castillo's files,
05:41which I think has not been processed,
05:43was that of the asphalted.
05:45He asphalted the whole country,
05:48from grade to grade,
05:52to get the support of the mayors.
05:57That is the reality.
06:00Because this is very recent.
06:02History cannot be reversed.
06:04But it's good that the former president assumes his role as an opponent,
06:09the question of the level of indebtedness.
06:12This government has been the champion of indebtedness.
06:16The one who indebted the country the least was Balaguer, who did not indebt it.
06:20And secondly, Leonel Fernández.
06:24Danilo Medina did commit the sin of modifying the composition of the debt.
06:30When Danilo assumed power in 2012,
06:33most of the Dominican debt was multilateral.
06:39It was with governments, it was with the World Bank,
06:43it was with the BID.
06:45And from a bonus issue that Hippolito Mejia did from then on,
06:49it started.
06:51And today, 90% of the debt is a bonus.
06:55And the bad thing about bonuses is that they are never paid.
06:58You pay interest on the bonus.
07:01And when the bonus is won, you have to hook it up again with another bonus.
07:05And if the rate is higher, it's even worse.
07:10That's the reality.
07:13He's doing his role as an opponent.
07:16On the other hand, today there is a very interesting report
07:22by the journalist Doris Pantaleón in El Listín Diario,
07:26where she highlights or compares how,
07:31between 2020 and 2022,
07:344,384 people died from COVID.
07:39But in that same period, 8,599 people died in traffic accidents.
07:46The Dominican Republic is one of the countries in the world
07:50where more people die by accident.
07:52You or I more easily die in an accident
07:56than by a cardiovascular issue,
08:01or by cancer, or by a shot, or a criminal,
08:05or by a police officer not shooting.
08:07Like these days, when a police officer shot a woman
08:10who was in a car with her children.
08:13You go out on the street and your life is in danger.
08:17And nothing has been done about it.
08:21And I want to refer to a recent, very serious case
08:27of an accident, which was not an accident.
08:31It's the case of that young woman who appears on the screen.
08:34Aida Nicole Reyes Gómez.
08:38Aida, 21 years old, was a brilliant student
08:41of marketing and technology.
08:43She graduated in April of this year.
08:46On February 26, she was in her Jeep,
08:51a Jeep that was passing through Churchill.
08:54The traffic light was green,
08:59and a drunk woman, a drunk woman,
09:03took the traffic light in red,
09:08gave it to the Jeep, the Jeep turned around.
09:12She tried to run away, but as a rubber band
09:15got stuck, she had to stop.
09:18Do I say her name?
09:21Yes, Raquel Guzmán Torres.
09:24She is the wife of a former congressman,
09:29but I'm not going to say his name,
09:32because it's not her fault.
09:34But the serious thing is, ladies and gentlemen,
09:37kind television viewers, that 9-11
09:40took 45 minutes to arrive.
09:43There were even people who wanted to take her
09:46to a nearby hospital, and the police
09:48didn't allow it.
09:51She died, she lost a life.
09:54But the serious thing about all this
09:56is that the family demanded that they
09:59do the alcohol test on the lady,
10:03two tests, and they gave her 0.68 and 0.77 grams per liter.
10:09The law says that when it's more than 0.50,
10:12you shouldn't drive.
10:15Do you know how serious the case is?
10:17That the Public Prosecutor's Office,
10:19listen to this, the prosecutors,
10:21asked to exclude from the case
10:24the data of the alcohol level of the driver.
10:28The family had to take to the streets yesterday
10:31with banners in Churchill,
10:34because they not only have the pain
10:36of the loss of Aida Nicole Reyes,
10:40but also the pain of wanting
10:42to set the person free.
10:44Gentlemen, in the United States,
10:46a drunk person goes through a red light
10:49and causes death.
10:51And that's an involuntary homicide,
10:53and they sentence her to 20 years.
10:55Listen to this, they're moving
10:57so that nothing happens to that lady
11:01who caused the death
11:04of a bright young woman
11:06who had a bright future.
11:08She's driving drunk.
11:12That has to have consequences.
11:14She has to pay for that imprudence.
11:17But that's this country, gentlemen.
11:20I join the pain of that family,
11:22because I'm a father, and I'm a grandfather,
11:25and I live in fear.
11:27My older grandchildren go out,
11:29they go to parties, of course,
11:31they take them and look for them.
11:33I have that fear.
11:34She was driving normally,
11:36the traffic light turned green,
11:38and there was a drunk lady
11:40who took the traffic light
11:42and hit her so hard that she threw up.
11:45Let's see what happens here,
11:47because this has to be followed up.
11:49This can't stay like this.
11:51It can't stay like this.
11:55Because that wasn't a pure and simple accident.
11:57There was an imprudence
11:59and a violation of the law.
12:03On the other hand,
12:06let's go to the fourth blow,
12:08as my friend, economist Rolando Reyes,
12:10says in his article,
12:12first blow, second blow, third blow.
12:14Let's go to the fourth blow.
12:16Look, Minister Hito Bisonó
12:18has been making efforts
12:20to install
12:22in the Dominican Republic
12:24companies
12:26that process
12:28drivers,
12:30semiconductors,
12:34which are key
12:36in chips,
12:38and chips today
12:40are used for cell phones,
12:42for vehicles, for everything.
12:44And I think that's why
12:46the Dominican economy has to go
12:48towards high-tech industries.
12:50But what happens?
12:52Donald Trump,
12:54in an act where he announced
12:56that a Taiwanese company,
12:58the world's leading company in chips,
13:00is going to invest
13:02100 billion dollars
13:04to install them
13:06in the United States.
13:08But he asked Congress
13:10to eliminate the incentives
13:12that were established
13:14in Biden's government
13:16for the installation of semiconductors
13:18industries.
13:20And here,
13:22Hito Bisonó and the president
13:24were going to launch that initiative
13:26taking advantage
13:28of the incentives of the United States
13:30to the industries.
13:32Even the Secretary of State
13:34of the United States
13:36in his visit
13:38said that semiconductors
13:40are vital,
13:42that the Dominican Republic,
13:44because of the Neshoring issue,
13:46was important,
13:48and that they were going to support that initiative.
13:50Of course, he didn't know what Toronto was thinking.
13:52That's why I wrote an article
13:54saying that Neshoring
13:56is at the forefront of Trump's policies.
13:58Trump wants the industries
14:00to be established in the United States,
14:02not in Mexico, not in the Dominican Republic,
14:04not in the United States.
14:06And that's why
14:08the tariffs are in Mexico.
14:10He
14:12put on stand-by
14:14for a month
14:16the issue of vehicles,
14:18because Ford and General Motors
14:20have plants in Mexico,
14:22which, taking advantage of the Free Trade Agreement,
14:24decided to invest,
14:26but they manufacture automobiles.
14:28Mexico has a production capacity
14:30of 5 million vehicles,
14:32exports 3.7 million
14:34and 2.7 million to the United States,
14:36but they also import parts
14:38of vehicles.
14:40So today,
14:42the investment is paralyzed.
14:44No investor dares
14:46to come to the Dominican Republic
14:48or any other country to set up an industry
14:50because they don't know
14:52what Trump is going to come up with.
14:54That's the situation.
14:56Finally,
14:58or not finally,
15:00this is the penultimate blow,
15:02the Reserve Bank announces
15:04its MyPymes fair.
15:06This is an important fair.
15:08We have to give support
15:10to the micro,
15:12to the small, medium-sized companies,
15:14which is the real industrial fabric.
15:16That fair has an interest rate
15:18of 1.5, which is very low
15:20today, because the active rate
15:22for the medium-sized companies
15:24is 15 and something.
15:26That's for six months.
15:28And the fair,
15:30the small business
15:32can go to any branch
15:34of the Reserve Bank
15:36and this will last two months.
15:38They facilitated
15:40last year,
15:42around,
15:44I'm looking for the data
15:46in my memory,
15:48of
15:5035 billion.
15:52I hope to put more money
15:54because we have to give support.
15:56One of the problems of the MyPymes
15:58is the financing, but it's also
16:00the many bureaucratic obstacles
16:02and the taxes and the advancements
16:04and the ITB, which makes it difficult
16:06for people to formalize.
16:08Finally, I invite you to my article
16:10this week, which is titled
16:12Interest Rate Supplemented
16:14to the Exchange Rate.
16:16Here we have always had a very high
16:18interest rate. Despite that, the economy
16:20grows, but it grew at a time
16:22when public investment was very high.
16:24For us, until 2008,
16:26the active rate, average
16:28and weighted, that is, the rate at which
16:30the banks lend, average, was
16:3220%.
16:34Only in 2008
16:36did it go down to 12
16:38and 13% in 2017.
16:40But of the 22 in advance,
16:4215 and something, despite
16:44the efforts of the Central Bank,
16:46the rate in February,
16:48average, was 15.7.
16:50Very high.
16:52That's the weighted rate.
16:54Consumer loans
16:56are above 20%.
16:58The mortgage holders have another rate.
17:00It depends on the type of loan.
17:02Now, why is this generated?
17:04Because the Central Bank has had
17:06a policy of favoring
17:08the stability
17:10of the exchange rate
17:12at the expense of the interest rate.
17:14And as you hear,
17:16the bank says, it injected liquidity
17:18and facilitated resources to the banks,
17:20injects liquidity on one side
17:22and takes it out on the other.
17:24But I invite you to read my article
17:26that is on the digital page of El Periodico Hoy,
17:28El Periodico Hoy Físico, and also
17:30on my social networks.
17:32We're going to commercials.
17:34Don't miss the interview with Mr.
17:36Luis Rivera, who is a multifaceted man.
17:38He's a marketer.
17:40He's an expert in geopolitics.
17:42He's a diplomat.
17:44He's an academic.
17:46So, with him, we have current issues.
17:48All current issues.
18:06El Periodico Hoy Físico
18:08El Periodico Hoy Físico
18:10El Periodico Hoy Físico
18:12El Periodico Hoy Físico
18:14El Periodico Hoy Físico
18:16El Periodico Hoy Físico
18:18The telematutino interview
18:20is an important event.
18:22We have a relatively young man
18:24with extraordinary versatility.
18:26He's a marketer.
18:28He's a diplomat.
18:30He's an academic.
18:32He's an expert in geopolitics.
18:34He's a conference speaker
18:36at an international level,
18:38projecting the country.
18:40He's a drone pilot.
18:42He's also a communicator.
18:44There are many things.
18:46Mr. Janel Ferreira,
18:48I thank you for accepting
18:50the invitation to the telematutino.
18:52I think the gratitude is ours
18:54because you represent one of the people
18:56with the greatest projection
18:58and, above all, a protagonist
19:00of the last 50 years of Dominican journalism.
19:02Even though I didn't study journalism.
19:04No, but journalism is an exercise.
19:06I'm a civil engineer
19:08and an economist.
19:10Janel, let's start
19:12with the issue of Donald Trump,
19:14which is what has occupied
19:16all the newspapers.
19:18The issue of tarpaulins,
19:20the impact.
19:22I already commented on the idea
19:24of manufacturing semiconductors here.
19:26No investor in the United States
19:28will risk investing
19:30outside the United States
19:32with Trump's line
19:34that it has to be there
19:36to face the problems.
19:38What do you think of Trump's policies?
19:40Look, in principle, Donald Trump,
19:42when he's campaigning,
19:44sets up his campaign command
19:46on three fundamental axes.
19:48First, the pacification of the world.
19:50I had found it in a war process
19:52both in the Middle East and in Asia.
19:54The war between Russia and Ukraine
19:56and the conflicts of Israel
19:58that is never to fly,
20:00the Revolutionary Guard, the Houthis,
20:02and now the last conflict
20:04in the Golan Heights.
20:06The second element of Trump
20:08was to dynamize the American economy
20:10that understood that it had had
20:12a reception under the administration
20:14of Joe Biden.
20:16And the third point,
20:18and no less important,
20:20that affects us in Latin America,
20:22was the end of the so-called
20:24return to Mexico,
20:26through this disgrace
20:28of 2.0 communication,
20:30where people see you in New York
20:32going to an academic activity
20:34and seeing you eating a hot dog
20:36and saying, well, I'm going to the American dream.
20:38Because Valbuena says in the movie
20:40that the dollars are on the ground.
20:42That's not true.
20:44The American economy is a horizontal economy
20:46that allows you to progress,
20:48but there is a component in the United States
20:50that people have to know about in the Dominican Republic.
20:52No one progresses without working.
20:54That's not true.
20:56You have to work and work a lot.
20:58And in fact,
21:00the Dominican diaspora
21:02that has progressed in the United States
21:04has a very beautiful story of sacrifice,
21:06of getting up at 4 or 5 in the morning,
21:08of beating the snow in the winter,
21:10of sacrificing yourself.
21:12All that growth
21:14is based on a sacrifice of work.
21:16So the one who is lazy here
21:18and goes around Mexico
21:20thinks that being lazy he is going to progress.
21:22You have to work.
21:24So Donald Trump has changed
21:26an economic matrix
21:28that was possibly supported
21:30in the recent past
21:32of a war economy
21:34by an orange economy.
21:36In the end,
21:38when we see in the commercial balance
21:40what it represents for Mexico,
21:42Canada and China,
21:44but especially for Mexico and Canada,
21:46which are the peripheral countries
21:48where there is an important free trade treaty
21:50between those states
21:52and where a large part of international trade
21:54used the territory of Mexico
21:56and Canada to manufacture and assemble
21:58parts to obtain
22:00that ease of free trade
22:02with the United States.
22:04China was the triangulation.
22:06Exactly. But what happens?
22:08There is a 10% for Chinese products
22:10and another 10% is added
22:12to reach a 20%.
22:14In the case of Mexico and Canada,
22:16there is a 25%.
22:18What does the trade of the United States
22:20represent with respect to them?
22:22For example,
22:24Canada in 2023,
22:26its exports to the United States
22:28represented 76%
22:30of the consolidated.
22:32In the case of Mexico,
22:3478%.
22:36That represented for Mexico
22:3837% of the GDP
22:40and for Canada 19%.
22:42But what about the United States?
22:44The United States exports
22:46to Mexico and Canada
22:48less than 3% of the GDP,
22:50which represents that in a war
22:52of sparrows, Mexico
22:54and Canada are losing to Donald Trump.
22:56Donald Trump has to be seen
22:58in the context of ...
23:00But internal prices increase.
23:02But they increase in a brief process.
23:04It is not inflationary as they say.
23:06No, no, no. And also what it seeks,
23:08you said it wisely in the intro,
23:10is to change the habit
23:12of consumption of the North American.
23:14It is not only to bring
23:16that international capitals
23:18set up companies in the territory of the North American.
23:20Companies that went
23:22abroad for a matter of
23:24lowering labor costs.
23:26But the North American who puts
23:28a vehicle, for example, Chevrolet brand
23:30or Ford, it does not matter to them,
23:32which is of North American origin
23:34and that vehicle costs $ 40,000.
23:36The equivalent of those
23:38brands, if you are going to look for a Toyota
23:40that is manufactured in Mexico, for example,
23:42or a Nissan that can be assembled in Canada
23:44and they put 25% of the
23:46swing to a vehicle that costs
23:48$ 50,000, it will pay
23:50$ 62,500.
23:52So the North American who has the money
23:54to buy a vehicle that has
23:56parallel competencies, prefers to buy
23:58its original brand to save
24:00$ 12,500. The original brand that is manufactured
24:02there, because if it is manufactured in Mexico
24:04and in Canada, it will pay more.
24:06Because that's why they gave the price a month,
24:08Ford and General Motors, which are in Mexico.
24:10I think that in the end,
24:12Trump is looking to make a great
24:14commercial pact
24:16to negotiate favorably
24:18towards the North American economy,
24:20because Trump is not going to bet on the economy
24:22of war. I have always said
24:24that this war conflict, for me,
24:26is a failed extension
24:28of diplomacy,
24:30but it also generates great resources
24:32for a war industry.
24:34Because most of the military
24:36zone of the world, especially
24:38the main countries, the United States,
24:40Germany, the Kingdom of England
24:42and France, increased
24:44by 600%.
24:46Every missile that detonates in the Gaza Strip,
24:48or in Ukraine,
24:50or in Donbass,
24:52even a woman who
24:54sells bananas in the mines pays for it.
24:56Why? Because it is an interconnected economy,
24:58and when the price of fuel rises,
25:00or of energy, because there is
25:02an oil conflict in the world, because the passage
25:04of Bad El Mande,
25:06the Strait of Hormuz, the Suez Canal,
25:08increases the maritime fleet,
25:10we all pay for it.
25:12The increase in the world,
25:14in an interconnected economy, is everyone's responsibility.
25:16Even a greenhouse
25:18in the mines market
25:20has to do with that war economy.
25:22So the world could not
25:24continue to bet on that conflict.
25:26I think that Trump, in that part,
25:28is right, and I don't know
25:30to what extent we,
25:32in the case of the Dominican Republic,
25:34have to bet on what affects us,
25:36that war component,
25:38that arancelario component.
25:40We have to make an urgent plan here.
25:42We have to
25:44bet on our strength.
25:46It is true that there was
25:48an international policy of the United States
25:50so that the peripheral countries,
25:52especially in Biden's administration,
25:54were used as special areas
25:56for the manufacture of that nanotechnology.
25:58Because that's where the world goes.
26:00We are talking about artificial intelligence.
26:02Those 17 elements of the periodic table
26:04that we now have,
26:06possibly, a settlement
26:08in the southern region of the republic,
26:10especially in the area of the hole of Pelempito
26:12and Cabo Rojo,
26:14we have to apply
26:16rapid intelligence in that trade war.
26:18Our diplomatic capacity
26:20must become
26:22a kind of urgent lobby
26:24to be strong in what we are.
26:26In what? In tourism.
26:28We have to plant the land.
26:30We have an advantage,
26:32Núñez.
26:34The Dominican Republic will always have water
26:36because the cold winds from the north
26:38will collide with the warm ones from the Caribbean.
26:40And in that central mountain range there will always be water.
26:42We have to make a plan of reforestation,
26:44of care.
26:46As long as they don't let it be deforested.
26:48Of course, but it is already a human component.
26:50There is a combination
26:52between the grace of nature,
26:54the components of the divinity of God
26:56for the Judeo-Christian believers like me,
26:58and the human component,
27:00because I will give you the tools,
27:02but if you don't take care of them, you won't have them.
27:04If we make a plan,
27:06and that's why I think that
27:08in the case of former president Joaquín Balaguer,
27:10he had a great vision
27:12regarding environmental protection.
27:14Whenever we evaluate
27:16the historical entities
27:18of the Dominican Republic,
27:20one cannot get excited
27:22about things of light and shadow.
27:24The great contributions of men in the Dominican Republic
27:26have to be seen in time.
27:28If there is tourism, it is for Balaguer.
27:30If there is a frank area,
27:32the dams that we have,
27:3490% were made for Balaguer.
27:36Of course, so we have an advantage,
27:38but also a disadvantage.
27:40Our geographical condition
27:42gives us that advantage,
27:44but if we don't take care of it, we can have a lot of problems.
27:46We are an island.
27:48We are not part of a continental platform.
27:50So we have as neighbors
27:52a country that doesn't believe
27:54in those environmental elements.
27:56It's not true that Haiti was always...
27:58But I want to leave the subject of Haiti
28:00to deal with it specifically.
28:02I want to sum up with this.
28:04How do you see the situation in Europe?
28:06A Europe that was protected
28:08by the United States,
28:10and now everyone says,
28:12no, increase your defense spending,
28:14prepare yourself, because there is no doubt
28:16that Putin and Russia represent a risk for Europe,
28:18or for the European peripheral countries
28:20of Russia.
28:22I think that
28:24the conflict between Russia and Ukraine
28:26didn't start in Russia
28:28or in Ukraine.
28:30For me, there was an international lobby
28:32for that conflict to break out,
28:34because that has been going on since 2014,
28:36since the Euromaidan.
28:38So the Europeans, in the case of Germany,
28:40for example, Germany had
28:42one of the top economies
28:44in the entire European bloc,
28:46but that economy was sustained
28:48because it had cheap energy.
28:50But cheap energy represented
28:52a component of Russia
28:54that had practically
28:56a direct line to Germany,
28:58and the energy components
29:00had a low cost.
29:02When they decide to connect,
29:04in the end, the beneficiaries of that conflict
29:06were China and the United States.
29:08Today, the Europeans have a tragedy.
29:10Most of the European leaders
29:12are in conflict with the social base
29:14that governs them.
29:16If you look, for example,
29:18at what happened in Germany,
29:20the leaders were in third place,
29:22and now they practically have
29:24a divided society.
29:26Yes, exactly.
29:28Because the world is looking
29:30for everything that has been known
29:32in the opposite direction.
29:34That's why there are great changes.
29:36Look at how a government
29:38with a social-democratic thinking,
29:40when they go to elections,
29:42a person comes
29:44with a totally opposite speech,
29:46looking for salvation.
29:48And the Europeans have a tragedy
29:50like we have.
29:52Immigration.
29:54Yes, exactly.
29:56Immigration is highly dangerous
29:58because it is fundamentalist.
30:00They are people that you have
30:02living with you, but suddenly
30:04you don't know to what extent
30:06they are going to explode.
30:08Because of that belief of the Muslim area,
30:10of the Diyadists, of the Houthis.
30:12They don't adapt to society.
30:14No, they can't adapt
30:16because of their nature,
30:18which is contrary to the genesis of where they come from.
30:20Immigration is not positive.
30:22When you are brought to a territory
30:24and you carry your customs,
30:26if those customs are bad customs,
30:28then you are going to harm that society.
30:30So today Europe has a tragedy.
30:34Most of those powers
30:36have changed their eating habits.
30:38People who were in the middle class
30:40have started to buy
30:42products in special areas
30:44of Aranceles.
30:46And others have had to go
30:48to community hostels.
30:50And that has been a great shame
30:52for the Europeans.
30:54To have to eat every day
30:56through a practically
30:58terrorist contribution.
31:00In addition to the aging population.
31:02Exactly. They didn't believe
31:04the European population
31:06that represents humanity.
31:08When China and India
31:10have more than 1,200,
31:12more than 1,300 million inhabitants.
31:14Where Africa represents
31:16the largest number of young laborers.
31:18Where America,
31:20for example, the American youth,
31:22has a tragedy due to
31:24vices and musical decomposition.
31:26Where does the world look?
31:28So the Europeans have always been
31:30the cradle of thought
31:32of modern Western civilization.
31:34We are a Judeo-Christian heritage,
31:36but really the four countries
31:38that had the most influence
31:40in America were Spain, France,
31:42Portugal and the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
31:44But today,
31:46Europe is not a model for anyone.
31:48The Europeans
31:50are looking for,
31:52within the peripheral conflicts,
31:54their salvation.
31:56But one does not see it in the short term.
32:00In the end, it is not known.
32:02I think that behind all these
32:04movements,
32:06there are two blocs facing each other,
32:08the G7 bloc and the BRICS.
32:10In the background,
32:12I think that...
32:14It is not China, but the United States.
32:16No, no, no, the blocs.
32:18And that is why,
32:20in the case of Turkey,
32:22which is the only country
32:24that is part
32:26of the NATO bloc,
32:28but already has a
32:30leading thread
32:32towards the BRICS.
32:34I do not know
32:36to what extent Donald Trump,
32:38with his administration,
32:40with his proximity to Russia,
32:42and with the distancing he has marked
32:44with the G7 members,
32:46will be able to dilute these tensions,
32:48but it is unbearable.
32:50All the countries of the world,
32:52especially us, in an emerging economy,
32:54had to sleep in three beds.
32:56There were only three beds in the world.
32:58You slept in the Chinese bed,
33:00the American bed or your own bed,
33:02and you can move around the world
33:04without a commercial connection.
33:06Interesting, Janel.
33:08We are going to take a short break,
33:10now that we still have issues
33:12with this young polyphysetic.
33:32We continue with the story of Janel Ferreiras,
34:00as I have said on several occasions.
34:02He is a marketer,
34:04he is an expert in geopolitics,
34:06he demonstrated this in the previous segment,
34:08he is a communicator,
34:10he is a conference speaker,
34:12he drives drones,
34:14he makes documentaries
34:16to project the country.
34:18All the issues are global,
34:20but there is one issue
34:22that is perhaps the main
34:24issue of the Dominican Republic,
34:26which is the issue of Haiti,
34:28because Trump eliminated
34:30the TPS and the TPA,
34:32and it is likely that half a million
34:34Haitians will be deported,
34:36and when they are sent to Haiti,
34:38there is no doubt
34:40that they come to the Dominican Republic.
34:42How do you visualize
34:44this Haitian issue,
34:46and how do you prevent that,
34:48after two decades,
34:50the majority of the population
34:52is Haitian?
34:54Look, the main threat
34:56is that the Dominican Republic
34:58represents Haiti,
35:00but that is not new,
35:02it has always been like that.
35:04At the moment,
35:06there is a deep
35:08lack of knowledge
35:10of the Dominican-Haitian history,
35:12so with the maximization
35:14of communication 2.0,
35:16there are many people
35:18opining on the Haitian issue,
35:20and there is a thesis,
35:22a theory, that the Dominicans
35:24do not represent Haiti,
35:26and that is not true.
35:28There is no population
35:30that has treated Haitians
35:32better than the Dominican Republic.
35:34Now, what happens?
35:36Haiti represents a permanent threat
35:38to the Dominican society
35:40since the very creation
35:42of Haiti,
35:44on January 1st, 1804.
35:46Haiti was born,
35:48in principle,
35:50by a movement of the Spanish colony
35:52after the devastation of Osorio
35:54at the beginning of the 17th century,
35:561605.
35:58It turns out that
36:00the arrival of the Spaniards
36:02to the island of Santo Domingo
36:04coincided with an event
36:06at the beginning of the 17th century,
36:08sorry,
36:10of the 16th century,
36:12which was the thesis of Martin Luther.
36:14So, when that area
36:16of piracy reached the island
36:18of La Tortuga,
36:20at the beginning of the 1600s,
36:221700s,
36:24they began to traffick not only animals
36:26and skins,
36:28they also began to bring Lutheran bibles,
36:30the thesis of Martin Luther.
36:32That caused,
36:34I would say,
36:36an astonishment towards the Spanish colony,
36:38which was a Catholic colony,
36:40and did not want
36:42any kind of expansion
36:44of that Lutheran thought
36:46on the island of Santo Domingo.
36:48From there it reached the area
36:50of piracy, Braxambela,
36:52Mendoza, Mendoza.
36:54The devastations of Osorio.
36:56Yes, the devastations were at the beginning of the 1600s,
36:58when the populations were devastated,
37:00which is where the community of
37:02Vallaguana and Monteplata was born.
37:04The population of Monteplata and Montecristi merged
37:06and Monteplata was formed there.
37:08And from Vallajá and Lallaguana,
37:10then Vallaguana came out.
37:12Then that population was depopulated,
37:14as its name indicates.
37:16But it turns out
37:18that those pirates,
37:20Braxambela, Benjamin Hornigom,
37:22Anne Benn, and Edouard Altar,
37:24who is well known,
37:26there are people who know him
37:28for the satire and the series
37:30of the Pirates of the Caribbean,
37:32by Balbanegra and Captain Jasparro,
37:34but that was real.
37:36From there, then, the French
37:38stayed on the part of the turtle.
37:40And there are some important treaties.
37:42In fact, to know this story,
37:44I am bringing this general collection of treaties
37:46from my friend and professor, Ambassador
37:48William Pai Piantini,
37:50because there are the treaties
37:52that gave rise to this population,
37:54African in principle and then Haitian.
37:56These Africans did not arrive alone.
37:58These Africans were brought by the Europeans
38:00for massive exploitation.
38:02But it turns out that
38:04from the creation
38:06of the French Revolution
38:08in 1789,
38:10where that spirit of the free man
38:12was born,
38:14those ideas that were given
38:16in France were not well seen
38:18in the part of Saint-Domingue.
38:20Why? Because here
38:22production and wealth
38:24were generated
38:26from the very exploitation of man.
38:28It was the richest colony.
38:30It was richer than the 13 British colonies
38:32of what was later
38:34the United States.
38:36But we who consume coffee and tea,
38:38Haiti came to represent
38:406 pounds of every 100 that the world consumed
38:42at one time.
38:44But Haiti was born without identity.
38:46That revolution of 1789,
38:48the French Revolution,
38:50there is a mulatto called Vincent Oguet
38:52who was the son of
38:54a French white
38:56and an African black.
38:58He says, we, the mulattos,
39:00we have to have a little
39:02right because that French Revolution
39:04has already said that here we are all free.
39:06And he is pursued.
39:08He comes to the eastern part
39:10of the island
39:12and the Spaniards here take him,
39:14make him a prisoner and give him to the French
39:16and he dies with one of the most terrible
39:18deaths. They kill him with the wheel.
39:20But a year later, in 1791,
39:22is the day
39:24Haiti was born.
39:26Haiti was born on August 14, 1791
39:28with a pact
39:30called the Bois-Caimans Pact,
39:32led by
39:34a voodoo priest,
39:36an African voodoo priest
39:38and a witch called Cécile Fatima,
39:40who was the daughter of a white and a black.
39:42They have stopped in the oases of Sidi Danto
39:44and Ogun Balaga.
39:46When they make that Bois-Caimans Pact,
39:48on August 14, 1791,
39:50they say,
39:52the god of the whites, of the French,
39:54they kill us, they humiliate us
39:56and they don't obey the clouds.
39:58So from there, the god of the blacks
40:00invites us to seek revenge.
40:02That is the night when they go out to kill
40:04all the whites.
40:06And they make the most terrible massacre
40:08known to the Haitian part of that time.
40:10A year later comes the knife war
40:12and they already achieve their independence
40:14on January 1, 1884.
40:16And they also destroyed the productive apparatus
40:18because they burned the ingenious.
40:20But they burned it, not because they wanted to burn it.
40:22They burned it because they were born without identity.
40:24Exactly.
40:26Haiti's great strength in time
40:28has become its main weakness,
40:30which is the cultural thread.
40:32That's why we see that in the Bois-Caimans Pact,
40:34in the ritual of Esiridantot
40:36and Ogumba Lagrigui,
40:38they bury a rooster in the ground,
40:40but they did the same effect
40:42under the conflict of the Dominican-Haitian Canal
40:44in the other days, they buried a rooster.
40:46Look how, a century later,
40:48the Haitians cannot disconnect their genesis,
40:50their genesis of violence.
40:52Why do the Haitians, when they kill
40:54Jovenel Moïse, they break his bones
40:56with fire weapons?
40:58Well, it wasn't the Colombians,
41:00it was the theory for the West
41:02to buy the plot.
41:04They break his bones because in the Haitian tradition,
41:06if they don't break his bones,
41:08he becomes a zombie
41:10and they chase him.
41:12Look at the population we are fighting.
41:14So, the Dominican Republic
41:16is also born with a pact,
41:18but our pact is different,
41:20it's the pact of the Trinitarians.
41:22In 1838,
41:24Juan Pablo Duarte,
41:26together with a group of young people,
41:28decides to make a society
41:30that wasn't secret because it was a model,
41:32because it was a fashion.
41:34It was secret
41:36because the Haitians at the time
41:38massacred them.
41:40One of the main demands
41:42of the Haitian domain for 22 years
41:44was that
41:46the citizen who caught
41:48Juan Pablo Duarte
41:50would get the rank of colonel
41:52and 3,000 pesos.
41:54That is a fortune for the time.
41:56So,
41:58we are born with that situation.
42:00We have lost our cultural thread.
42:02Here we don't know who is Duarte,
42:04who is Mella, who is Luperon, who is Sánchez,
42:06who was María Trinidad Sánchez,
42:08who was
42:10Concepción Bona.
42:12That theory of the Dominican flag,
42:14for example, is a
42:16miscounted construction.
42:18The Dominican flag
42:20is a redeeming flag of the French flag
42:22because the Haitians,
42:24when they are born with their republic,
42:26they hate France so much
42:28that they decide to cut
42:30the white of the French flag.
42:32They turn blue and red
42:34and that's how the Haitian flag is born.
42:36So, Juan Pablo Duarte tells
42:38María Trinidad Sánchez and Concepción Bona
42:40to put a cross
42:42of the Trinity of God
42:44in the center and that's how
42:46the Dominican flag is born.
42:48That's why I always oppose
42:50that the Dominicans degrade the blue and red crown
42:52for the center, not because
42:54it is a matter of racism.
42:56It is that the people who forget their history
42:58will be condemned to repeat it.
43:00And we are what we are
43:02for our history.
43:04We cannot forget our genesis.
43:06We are a Spanish heritage
43:08that arrives in 1492
43:10to these coasts.
43:12We founded the first city
43:14in Isabela, the first settlement
43:16in the Casicazo de Marién,
43:18the first city of Santo Domingo,
43:20practically ending
43:22the 15th century.
43:24But the Haitians arrive
43:26after the Osorio devastation,
43:28after the massification of slavery,
43:30where the African population
43:32represented 84% of San Domingo.
43:34Here we had
43:36a slavery, but softer.
43:38Yes, but the slavery of us,
43:40because there is this great detail,
43:42and how good you make that introduction.
43:44Look, the black Americans,
43:46the blacks of the Patanemo Bay in Venezuela,
43:48the blacks of Cuba,
43:50the blacks of San José de Mendoza,
43:52of Mandinga and of the Minas,
43:54and the blacks of Haiti,
43:56they are the same blacks.
43:58The only thing is that the other blacks
44:00were able to adapt to the Judeo-Christian component.
44:02The Africans remained a pure colony
44:04because of that resentment
44:06towards the French,
44:08and they remained trapped in time.
44:10That is the great detail.
44:12But the blacks of Brazil, the blacks of North America,
44:14the blacks of Jamaica, the blacks of Haiti,
44:16the Africans,
44:18they adapted and assumed the English language
44:20in Jamaica,
44:22the Portuguese language in Brazil,
44:24the Spanish language
44:26in San José de Mendoza.
44:28But the Haitians stayed behind
44:30and are still behind.
44:32The Haitians have not overcome
44:34that denial of their principles,
44:36and it is true that it is a tragedy,
44:38that shock
44:40that the French had on them.
44:42And it is true that to achieve their independence
44:44they had to pay a high price.
44:46All that is true.
44:48And it is true that most of the wealth
44:50of the Haitian people went to three territories,
44:52which everyone knows who they are,
44:54especially the United States, Canada and France.
44:56But there is a reality.
44:58The growth of Haiti in the Dominican territory
45:00represents our greatest threat.
45:02It is not possible that the Dominican Republic,
45:04in some provinces,
45:06of every 20 women who are born,
45:08who give birth to a child,
45:1018 are Haitians and 2 are Dominicans.
45:12That is a tragedy.
45:14So, our productive apparatus
45:16has justified
45:18that the Haitian labor
45:20in three or four fundamental elements
45:22for our economy,
45:24such as tourism, construction,
45:26agriculture and informality,
45:28are Haitian.
45:30That is not possible.
45:32It is not because we are anti-Haitian.
45:34We are going to disappear.
45:36You give 20 years, I give 10.
45:38I give 10.
45:40The Haitians have already entered
45:42a stage of normalization of the invasion.
45:44If we are going to see a coconut
45:46on the street,
45:48the subconscious tells you that
45:50a Haitian is going to buy it.
45:52But the probability that a Haitian
45:54is going to buy it is more than 99%.
45:56And the fruit vendor on the corner too.
45:58But even the street vendors.
46:00Yesterday, when I got to my apartment,
46:02my daughters went to visit me
46:04to do a homework,
46:06and when I opened the window,
46:08there was a little Haitian plant.
46:10Right behind it,
46:12there was a little plant selling
46:14live chickens to kill Haitians.
46:16But there is a building in front of it
46:18where 100% of Haitians work.
46:20Can we live with that? No.
46:22Are we anti-Haitian?
46:24No, we are not anti-Haitian.
46:26We are not anti-anything.
46:28What we are is Dominican.
46:30And our only territory is this.
46:32We cannot go to Puerto Rico,
46:34or Venezuela, or Colombia, or Argentina
46:36to demand the rights
46:38of the Dominican Republic of Duarte.
46:40We cannot raise our flag.
46:42So, if we lose,
46:44because of birth conditions,
46:46the territory, because the demography
46:48and the geography
46:50indicate the future of the peoples,
46:52we are not going to move from here.
46:54But we are called
46:56to disappear
46:58if Haitian growth continues in that dimension.
47:00Unfortunately.
47:02So, the Haitians are not...
47:04Now there is a conflict
47:06in social media
47:08regarding Haitians and Venezuelans,
47:10which was seen as a joke.
47:12Gentlemen, Venezuelans are our brothers,
47:14not because they only speak Spanish.
47:16We come from
47:18the same genesis.
47:20We are a Taíno heritage
47:22that comes from
47:24Dorinoco,
47:26called the Arawaks.
47:28Before the Spaniards,
47:30the first inhabitants of the island of Santo Domingo,
47:32which were divided into medium Taínos,
47:34the great Taínos and the lower ones,
47:36come precisely
47:38from the shores of Dorinoco
47:40and the bay of Patanemo.
47:42But they are the Arawaks.
47:44But also, where does Juan Pablo Duarte die?
47:46He dies in Caracas.
47:48And what is the link
47:50between us and the Venezuelans?
47:52It is a historical link
47:54of the same populations,
47:56because the majority of those Spanish populations
47:58left Santo Domingo
48:00and Azoa de Compostela.
48:02Those who discover Mexico
48:04leave Azoa de Compostela.
48:06Those who discover Peru and arrive in Panama
48:08leave precisely Santo Domingo.
48:10A large part of the
48:12legal discussions
48:14in the colonial era,
48:16in the Venezuelan coast,
48:18were decided in the courts of Santo Domingo.
48:20So how are you going to ignore that?
48:22How are you going to confuse a Venezuelan
48:24with a Haitian for a beauty issue?
48:26No, it's not about that.
48:28Venezuela was in its oil boom.
48:30Many Dominicans
48:32emigrated to Venezuela.
48:34The Dominicans had three fundamental origins,
48:36or three
48:38populations where they emigrated.
48:40New York in the United States,
48:42Madrid, Barcelona in Spain,
48:44and Caracas, Venezuela.
48:46In fact, in Venezuela,
48:50in the last ten years,
48:52I have had to go to Venezuela more than 19 times.
48:54I even gave some
48:56free conferences in Venezuela.
48:58And I have a very affectionate bond with Venezuela.
49:00In Venezuela, there is a tradition that says
49:02that Dominican women are the women that women cook.
49:04Why? Because in the area of
49:06Venezuelan mining,
49:08the Dominicans, in the 70s and 80s,
49:10formalized fund business
49:12and taught
49:14that rice with guandules
49:16and that quinchoncho because
49:18it's the same thing. For us it's vegetables,
49:20for them it's flax. For us
49:22it's yautia, for them it's okumo.
49:24For us it's chinola, for them
49:26it's passion fruit, possibly.
49:28So, that
49:30very similar identity, we cannot
49:32forget it. Also,
49:34the Venezuelans in the Dominican territory
49:36were not responsible for the
49:38Moca collapse in 1805.
49:40The Venezuelans did not come here in 1822
49:42and did not occupy for 22 years.
49:44You cannot confuse
49:46Jean-Jacques de Salines
49:48and Tussauds de Louverture
49:50with Sibón Bolívar and Miranda.
49:54You cannot confuse
49:56the brotherhood with Venezuela
49:58because they are white and beautiful.
50:00No. Also,
50:02Venezuelan women
50:04in public hospitals
50:06do not represent 0.02%
50:08of births.
50:10Haitians in some provinces
50:12represent 90%
50:14of births. It's serious.
50:16Janel, what a shame you don't have more time
50:18but I'm impressed and I hope
50:20to have you here more often.
50:22Well, it's a privilege for me.
50:24Every time you need me, I'll be here
50:26because
50:28I grew up
50:30following the formality
50:32of your communication.
50:34I think it's important
50:36that your experience
50:38serves to link these new thoughts
50:40that we have.
50:42Again, thank you very much, Janel.
50:44Let's go to commercials.
50:46See you in the final stretch of
50:48Telematutino 11.
50:52See you in the final stretch of
50:54Telematutino 11.
51:22END 웨
51:33Hello, Ontario and everyone.
51:34In that wonderful interview
51:36with Janel Ferreras
51:38we conclude
51:39our installment this Thursday
51:41If god wills, we see you tomorrow.
51:43And I invite you
51:45to continue the varied programming
51:47of the Canal 11 TV System.
51:49We'll see each other tomorrow if god wills.
51:52♪♪

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