OFF THE BOAT WITH LE JOSEPH

Shamir Joseph

Shamir Joseph isn’t here to play nice or sugar‑coat Haiti’s reality. Off The Boat With Le Joseph is a raw, unapologetic podcast where a Haitian‑born, Queens‑based host dives into everything mainstream media would rather ignore. From exposing why Haiti’s education system stays broke to calling out corruption in the Transitional Presidential Council and ripping apart slogans like “Viv Ansanm” that mask terror as revolution, Shamir keeps it real and bilingual, mixing English with Haitian Creole. He breaks down assassinations like Jovenel Moïse’s death, unpacks U.S. immigration policies and the Haitian diaspora’s struggles, and even drops history gems about figures like Jean‑Jacques Dessalines. Expect strong opinions, deep‑dive analysis, and zero fluff. Whether you’re Haitian, Caribbean, an immigrant, or just curious, this show is your weekly dose of crime, politics, news and diaspora life—all filtered through the lens of someone who’s lived it. Get on board, learn some Creole, and buckle up for Shamir’s unfiltered take on Haiti and the Caribbean diaspora.

  1. THE HAITIAN NATIONAL POLICE

    FEB 1

    THE HAITIAN NATIONAL POLICE

    In this episode of Off the Boat with Le Joseph, we take a deep, documentary-style examination of the Haitian National Police (Polis Nasyonal d’Haiti – PNH) and the structural failures that have shaped Haiti’s current security crisis. This is not entertainment, gossip, or propaganda. It is an investigation into how an institution created to protect the nation became overwhelmed by political interference, corruption, underfunding, foreign dependency, and organized crime. The episode traces: The controversial creation of the PNH after the disbandment of the Haitian Armed ForcesThe role of foreign influence in training, leadership selection, and logisticsHow corruption and impunity weakened internal accountabilityThe impact of chronic underpayment and poor working conditions on officersGang infiltration and the blurred lines between criminal groups and state authorityThe human cost of insecurity on civilians and communitiesThis discussion makes a clear distinction between honest officers working under extreme conditions and the systemic failures that have trapped them inside a broken institution. The episode also explores why many Haitians believe that restoring public security requires more than reforms on paper — it requires accountability, institutional courage, and consequences for those who undermine the rule of law. Off the Boat with Le Joseph is a long-form podcast focused on Haitian and Caribbean history, politics, institutions, and social realities, offering context-driven analysis for listeners seeking a deeper understanding of the forces shaping Haiti today.

    21 min
  2. BLACK EXCELLENCE

    JAN 19

    BLACK EXCELLENCE

    Off The Boat with Le Joseph — Season 2, Episode 2 MLK Day: The Legacy, The Struggle, The Continuation This episode is a tribute, a lesson, and a challenge. Released in recognition of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Season 2 Episode 2 of Off The Boat with Le Joseph explores the true meaning of the MLK legacy—beyond soundbites, beyond holidays, and beyond selective memory. Dr. King’s fight for justice through non-violent resistance reshaped the United States and inspired movements around the world. But his dream was never meant to live only in speeches or marches. It was meant to continue through discipline, excellence, leadership, and responsibility. In this episode, we connect MLK’s vision to a broader, pan-American Black history, drawing parallels with the revolutionary legacy of Haiti and figures like Toussaint Louverture, whose earlier struggle proved that Black liberation was possible—even against global empires. Though their methods differed, both leaders pursued the same goal: freedom, dignity, and self-determination for Black people. The episode then turns to the living legacy of MLK by spotlighting Black excellence across professions often ignored by mainstream narratives. From medicine and science to law, finance, engineering, governance, and culture, we highlight leaders who embody the continuation of the dream through action, not just words. Featured figures include: Alexa Canady, the first Black woman neurosurgeon in the United StatesKatherine Johnson, whose mathematics powered NASA’s space missionsThurgood Marshall and Ketanji Brown Jackson, who reshaped American law at the highest levelKenneth Chenault and Pascal Desroches, examples of Black leadership at the top of global finance and corporate AmericaBarack Obama, the first Black President of the United StatesDenzel Washington, whose influence extends beyond film into mentorship and community upliftThis episode also addresses accountability within Black communities—rejecting violence, challenging harmful stereotypes, and emphasizing personal responsibility alongside systemic critique. The message is clear: honoring MLK means continuing the work, not just quoting the dream. Off The Boat with Le Joseph invites listeners to see Black history as interconnected, global, and ongoing—and to recognize that the future of the movement depends on how we lead, build, and represent ourselves today. This is not just remembrance. This is continuation.

    13 min

About

Shamir Joseph isn’t here to play nice or sugar‑coat Haiti’s reality. Off The Boat With Le Joseph is a raw, unapologetic podcast where a Haitian‑born, Queens‑based host dives into everything mainstream media would rather ignore. From exposing why Haiti’s education system stays broke to calling out corruption in the Transitional Presidential Council and ripping apart slogans like “Viv Ansanm” that mask terror as revolution, Shamir keeps it real and bilingual, mixing English with Haitian Creole. He breaks down assassinations like Jovenel Moïse’s death, unpacks U.S. immigration policies and the Haitian diaspora’s struggles, and even drops history gems about figures like Jean‑Jacques Dessalines. Expect strong opinions, deep‑dive analysis, and zero fluff. Whether you’re Haitian, Caribbean, an immigrant, or just curious, this show is your weekly dose of crime, politics, news and diaspora life—all filtered through the lens of someone who’s lived it. Get on board, learn some Creole, and buckle up for Shamir’s unfiltered take on Haiti and the Caribbean diaspora.