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Henderson Bovell
Henderson Bovell

A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear.”
Cicero

It seems rather obvious that this failed DLP Government hasย  betrayed Barbados and is now waging was against the citizens of this country through its flawed and oppressive policies. The DLP has so weakened the power of Barbados that this country is now unattractive to investors and tourist, as confirmed by Donville Inniss’s recent ‘begging-bowl-expedition’ to T&T.

This is a time for serious politics, serious policies and serious people, but in what can only be described as, a desperation for confidence, the Prime Minister tells the country that his Cabinet are all “eminent” persons. I suppose no one will object that they are indeed a bunch of people who have distinguished themselves in causing, Barbados to be downgraded to junk, unprecedented human suffering, the deficit to spiral out-of-control, an alarming increase in the rate of poverty and unemployment, enterprises to collapse and investors to flee Barbados.ย  It is only when the DLP is in office that this country ever really hears about placing thousands on the bread-line. Perhaps that makes the DLP and its Ministers feel special.

ย 

But, the true facts are that many of the people in that huge unproductive DLP Cabinet (like Suckoo; Todd; Ince; Husbands and Sandiford-Garner) failed to meet the electorate’s standards and were recently rejected at the Polls. But they meet the Prime Minister’s and for that arrogance and failure to accept the will of the people – the taxpayers of Barbados are now saddled with an unjustified charge and cost overrun of some one million dollars in recurrent expenditure, annually. He said they are “all” duly elected but that is a horrible lie!ย  Rating Agencies; Investors, Consumers, the unemployed and others do not have confidence in this failed DLP Cabinet (many of whom were recently rejected at the polls) and yet the Prime Minister alleges that they are “all” duly elected and qualify as “eminent” persons.

Just curious: how exactly is the DLP protecting democracy when it is making Barbados financially and socially weak? How is it protecting democracy when (up to recently) the BLP could not even buy time on CBC to air a press conference on the economy?

Causing a downgrade to junk; printing money; putting the country on a collision-course with a devaluation and refusing help such as would be obtained were a Committee of real “Eminent Persons” established; and refusing other sound advise from well-reasoned and experience persons – which could put the country on a more desirable path – is a betrayal of allegiance to Barbados.

How are such aggressive acts against the peace and stability of Barbados – “protecting our democracy?” And, how exactly is the DLP “protecting democracy” when Barbados is essentially being managed from Washington, by the IMF? This is really very serious because, in the recent General Election, the DLP spent thousands on radio; television and newspaper ads to ensure that the entire country gets its message that if the people it was sending the communication to and Barbadians in general – voted for the DLP, their employment in the Public Service of Barbados would be safe and there will be “no layoffs” and “no privatisation.” The country is now finding out that it was all an elaborate hoax; a horrible lie, cold betrayal and trademark DLP deception.ย  And yet, the DLP is now telling Barbados, that they are “eminent persons” who are “protecting our democracy.”

Section 6 of the Election Offenses and Controversies Act essentially says “no” and makes offering a job in return for a vote a crime (offense) and yet – the DLP now alleges that they are “eminent persons” who are “protecting democracy.” “O judgment thou art fled to brutish beast and men have lost their reason!” It has to be democracy at work, that because of the DLP’ fatted calf doctrine, taxpayers are scrambling annually to find over a million dollar to pay the very Dems the Electorate rejected at the polls, to do nothing but sit in a DLP Cabinet, to waste time.

I am reminded of the following quote:

“Nothing is more unreliable than the populace, nothing more obscure than human intentions, nothing more deceptive than the whole electoral system.”

– Marcus Tullius Cicero

I end as Robert Browning would want:

“We shall march prospering,โ€”not thro’ his presence;
ย ย ย ย  Songs may inspirit us,โ€”not from his lyre;
Deeds will be done,โ€”while he boasts his quiescence,
ย ย ย ย ย  Still bidding crouch whom the rest bade aspire:
Blot out his name, then, record one lost soul more,
ย ย ย ย ย  One task more declined, one more footpath untrod,
One more devils’-triumph and sorrow for angels,
ย ย ย ย ย  One wrong more to man, one more insult to God!
Life’s night begins: let him never come back to us!
ย ย ย ย ย  There would be doubt, hesitation and pain,
Forced praise on our partโ€”the glimmer of twilight,
ย ย ย ย ย  Never glad confident morning again!….”

<

p align=”justify”>- Robert Browning: The Lost Leader


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110 responses to “DLP Fatted Calf at Work: Taxpayers Scrambling to Find One Million Annually to Pay Dems Electorate Rejected”


  1. @ Hal Austin
    You are a nutcase. Hon. Michael Lashley dresses as a man in the sunshine not snow and hail. You seem to be more British than Prince Charles. I recommend a good sea bath at Brownes Beach and a shot of rum for you.

  2. Back in Time Jack Avatar
    Back in Time Jack

    Miller
    ………….but Estwick ain’t going along with the plan to lay-off 3,000 public workers. He done resign as chairman of the committee on infrastructure of cabinet.
    The battle lines have been drawn.

  3. Back in Time Jack Avatar
    Back in Time Jack

    Lighthouse
    Lashley comes across as pimp not a minister, it ain’t noting to do with climate and temperature fella. Do we need to see his sweaty hairy chest and gold chains when he is of official government business?

  4. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ lighthouse | January 29, 2014 at 9:14 AM |
    โ€œHon. Michael Lashley dresses as a man in the sunshine not snow and hail.โ€

    As a lighthouse you ought to let your light shine as a beacon of fairness and โ€˜balancedโ€™ wisdom.

    Why not apply the same appropriate dress code to the same โ€œsunshineโ€ business environment? Why would the same ML want to dress in ill-fitting garments suited for the cold when he pretends to be conducting monkey business passing for the peopleโ€™s business?
    Why not advise him and all the rest on both sides to dress as if they live in the tropics and not in cold dreary Westminster Palace?

    According to the Mighty Chalkdust, โ€˜Dem white people really laughing at you!โ€™

  5. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Back in Time Jack | January 29, 2014 at 9:21 AM |
    “.. but Estwick ainโ€™t going along with the plan to lay-off 3,000 public workers.”

    So what is going to happen come the real โ€˜Blackโ€™ Friday?
    A deal could be struck in which the workers could be kept on until the end of the financial year. This might appease the cowardly doctor to get him back in the Cabinet to help chase the black cat around the room.

    You know very well that Estwick is a loudmouth bully among his colleagues (especially Darcy B and the unseen presence of Leroy Greenverbs and his dirty money hands), a barking pit bull on political platforms but a very insecure poodle of a decision-maker who likes posing as Fumbleโ€™s lapdog.

    Fumble has been very disappointing and disloyal to the poor Doctor; reneging on many promises made prior to his elevation as primus inter pares. Davidโ€™s dead brother โ€œTโ€ must be turning with torture in his tormented cremated soul.


  6. The FUND is running the place. We are running out of FX. They will come up with the beginning of a solution by mid year. That is when we will have a real opportunity to know what the true facts are. Suggest we keep all our US$ under out mattresses until we know the solution and true facts.

  7. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @sith | January 29, 2014 at 10:44 AM |

    That has been my assessment for some time now.
    It seems we are reading from the same page in economic playbook called “Devaluation: Good or Bad for Bim?”.


  8. Here is another little wake up call for the Region.
    Royal Bank of Canada to sell Jamaican banking operations
    1 hour ago – Reuters

    Royal Bank of Canada to sell Jamaican banking operations
    TORONTO (Reuters) – Royal Bank of Canada <RY.TO> said on Wednesday that it had agreed to sell its Jamaican banking operations to Sagicor Group Jamaica Ltd <SJ.JS>.

    The bank, Canada’s largest, said the purchase price was roughly the book value of the assets, but did not elaborate. It expects to lose C$60 million ($54 million) from the transaction, partly because of a goodwill writedown.

    Sagicor Group Jamaica is controlled by Barbados-based financial services company Sagicor Financial Corp <SAFI.L>, according to Thomson Reuters data.

    Royal Bank said it remained committed to the Caribbean but would focus on regions there where it has a bigger market share.

    The Jamaican market is dominated by Royal Bank’s smaller Canadian rival, Bank of Nova Scotia <BNS.TO>. Scotiabank, which has been operating in the country since the late 1800s, has more than 2,000 staff there and an island-wide network of about 35 branches.

    “The sale of Royal Bank’s Jamaica operations will likely raise questions regarding the strategic implications for other regions in the Caribbean that it operates,” Barclays analyst John Aiken said in a note to clients.

    Aiken raised the possibility that Royal Bank would exit the entire region if its operations there would fetch a high enough price.

    Shares of Royal Bank were down 46 Canadian cents at C$69.10 in early trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Wednesday.

    (Reporting by Allison Martell and Euan Rocha; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

  9. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Back in Time Jack | January 29, 2014 at 9:21 AM |

    BITJ, your man Estwick the changeling appears to be going into his bullying pit-bull mood. He plans to spill the beans and upset the DLP applecart. Is he serious this time or just a another loose cannon shoot out by the
    What will the Fumbler do? Heed Jones’s advice to crack a few heads and shoot down some or is he going to sacrifice the Sinliar and give the Doc a chance at the economic management wheel?
    Next month is an ideal time to reshuffle and reduce his cabinet full of blind mice running from a black bald pooch cat called โ€œIMF Devaluationโ€.
    We are certain the garrison boy who doesn’t know his decimal elbow from his fraction arse will welcome such a relieving from his intellectual burdens.


  10. Sith

    Thanks

    You are right on the ball, checking the financial media.

    Here is what The Gleaner has to say

    โ€œSagicor tipped to buy RBC Jamaica – Deal would vault Sagicor Bank to No. 3

    Royal Bank of Canada is said to be cutting its losses in Jamaica and selling its banking assets to Sagicor Group Jamaica, according to different sources, one of whom said that lawyers were still poring over the final details last night ahead of the deal’s announcement.
    But the parties have studiously avoided calls for comment even as staff at RBC Jamaica have been voicing concerns about the ongoing reports and the prospects for their jobs.
    Sagicor Jamaica held a general meeting yesterday, and advised staff that a transaction was pending but did not disclose the asset being acquired, said persons working there.
    Sources say RBC Royal Bank Jamaica, formerly RBTT Bank Jamaica, will cease to operate, marking a pullout of Jamaica. The existing RBC Royal Bank branches will eventually rebrand as Sagicor Bank, Wednesday Business was told.
    A sale to Sagicor would nearly quadruple the assets of Sagicor Bank Jamaica Limited from $21 billion to around $78 billion and grow its small network of six branches to 19.
    Sagicor Bank is currently the second-smallest of seven in Jamaica’s commercial banking arena, with three per cent of industry assets.
    Third-largest bank
    Acquisition of RBC Jamaica assets would make Sagicor Bank the third-largest of six banks – ahead of FirstCaribbean Jamaica but behind NCB and BNS – in a market that the central bank last valued at $732 billion by assets. It would then control 11 per cent of assets, and about 12 per cent of the loan market, assuming full acquisition of RBC’s banking assets and loan book.
    Initial reports to Wednesday Business were that RBC and Sagicor were expected to sign off on the deal late Monday and face the media the next day at a joint press conference, but the parties failed to tie up all loose ends and had to put off the announcement.
    At the same time, there was talk that another Jamaican financial institution was also in contention for RBC Jamaica, but that, too, is unconfirmed.
    The sale of RBC Jamaica would rid Royal Bank Canada of a lossmaker, which up to last year had accumulated deficits of $6.9 billion (C$69 million).
    To manage its losses, the bank shuttered four branches last year, leaving 13 in operation. It then had about 44 automated teller machines in its network.
    The bank has also been trying to shed bad loans and rebalance its non-performing loan portfolio. RBC’s total provisioning for loan losses at last disclosure of industry data by the central bank was $5.87 billion.
    Two of the more high-profile underperforming loans were made to the hotel/resort sector: one for the purchase of the former Wyndham Kingston, and the other as co-financing for the Palmyra condominium development in Montego Bay.
    Both properties were placed in receivership and are the subject of legal challenges. RBC Jamaica has struggled to sell the former Wyndham hotel, which was put up for auction and then withdrawn from the block last yearโ€

    It makes one wonder how Sagicor will be able to make this Jamaican lossmaker into a moneymaker when RBC could not.

  11. The Pibull bite FS and CS in one Avatar
    The Pibull bite FS and CS in one

    What did the Pitbull do exactly, I only hear rumors

  12. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ millertheanunnaki | January 29, 2014 at 12:54 PM |

    “Is he serious this time or just a another loose cannon shoot out by the..”

    Should read: Is he serious this time or just another loose cannon shoot out by the gunslinger from Brereton against the fumbling cat-chaser from the Marchfield cane ground?

  13. The Pibull bite FS and CS in one Avatar
    The Pibull bite FS and CS in one

    A cat chaser has how many lives and how bullet does a gunslinger have?


  14. Here is what The Gleaner has to say about CIBC FirstCaribbean.

    โ€œFirstcaribbean Jamaica Makes $1.3B Loss

    Wednesday | January 29, 2014

    Managing director of CIBC FirstCaribbean Jamaica, Nigel Holness. – File
    Cushioned by tax credits, FirstCaribbean Jamaica made a net loss of $903 million last year amid falling interest income and a massive write-off of bad loans.
    The bank made a profit of $84 million in 2012 when its impaired loans amounted to $187 million. At year end October 2013, loan write-offs were four to five times greater at $871 million.
    FirstCaribbean Jamaica’s interest income fell by more than $370 million, but the gains in other income boosted total net revenue to $4.2 billion (2012: $4b). The bank’s total expenses of $4.6 billion were greater than its net revenue.
    The loan losses plus increased expenses led to pretax losses of $1.3 billion for the group, which were offset by $396 million of tax credits.
    FirstCaribbean is the fourth-largest of seven commercial banks, with group assets of $56 billion, including a loan portfolio of $32 billion of which nearly $1.5 billion were non-performing.
    Operation’s Troubles Apparent
    Signs of the Jamaican operation’s troubles were apparent last year when parent FirstCaribbean International Bank Limited – a regional banking group owned by CIBC of Canada – announced that it would be injecting capital into the subsidiary.
    The injection amounted to US$70 million, for which FirstCaribbean Jamaica issued 528 million ordinary ‘A’ shares to its parent. The bank’s share capital rose from $1.4 billion to $8.46 billion as a result, and its capital base has nearly doubled from $7.9 billion to $14 billion.
    FirstCaribbean Jamaica is now ranked as the third-largest commercial bank by central bank data on the sector. The bank has said that the fresh capital would be used for a more aggressive play for market share and other expansion plans.
    Head of the country operation in Jamaica, Nigel Holness, had not commented up to press time on the results.
    Parent FirstCaribbean International, which is based in Barbados, also reported a loss of US$27.5 million at year end October 2013, which CEO Rik Parkill said were largely due to loan losses across the group amounting to US$25 million.
    Jamaica’s loan impairments translated to just over US$8 million and would have accounted for one-third of the losses.
    The regional bank is planning to cut staff by 10 per cent and implement other measures aimed at restoring profitability, but offered no details on which of its 17 markets would be most affected.โ€

    With head office and back office operations in Barbados, it is reasonable to expect that Barbados will bear the brunt of 10% staff cuts.


  15. @Due Diligence

    Does it mean that Sagicor are taking FX from Barbados and moving it into Jamaica? I would ventue to say Jamaicans will not support this operation once it becomes clear who owns it.


  16. Sith
    Sagicor payment (FX) will likely go to RBC Toronto.

    See Globe & Mail article at:
    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/rbc-selling-jamaican-unit-to-rival-lender-as-market-challenges-weigh/article16567222/#dashboard/follows/

    Includes

    โ€œThere clearly are challenges in the region, but it varies from country to country,โ€ he added, noting that southern, more resource-driven islands such as Trinidad and Tobago are performing better than others that are dependent on tourism.
    The sale extends a growing list of restructuring moves taken by Canadian banks that operate in the Caribbean โ€“ namely RBC, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and Bank of Nova Scotia. When reporting their last quarterly earnings, all three warned about the challenging state of the market.
    The Caribbean economy is struggling because tourist dollars have been harder to come by over the past five years. Many islands were also dramatically affected by the global financial crisis as the economic slowdown hurt commerce in the region and resulted in weaker demand for loans as well as higher loan writeoffs. RBCโ€™s Jamaican operation had some loan charges of its own stemming from the hotel sector.
    CIBC took a $39-million charge to restructure FirstCaribbean International Bank Ltd. last quarter, and RBC also incurred a restructuring charge, the size of which wasnโ€™t disclosed.
    โ€œWhile credit quality in our Caribbean portfolio has been stabilizing, challenges are likely to persist in the near term until we see sustained improvements in the regional economic environment,โ€ RBC chief risk officer Mort Friis said on a conference call in December.

    RBCโ€™s divestiture comes after CIBC announced last month that it was implementing a restructuring that chief executive officer Gerry McCaughey said would โ€œput a brake on the growth in costs.โ€ The bank announced plans to reduce head count by 10 per cent across the 17 islands where it operates.


  17. @Due Diligence
    Agreed it will likely to go to Canada. Point being it is more FX leaving the island and we are talking a bunch of millions at a time when we have to borrow FX with harsh harsh terms to pay the import bill. . It is a telling sign when a leadng Barbados Insurance company takes money it has gathered in great part from Barbados residents and invests it in Jamaica.

  18. The Pibull bite FS and CS in one Avatar
    The Pibull bite FS and CS in one

    The drain of foreign reserves is not rocket science, its a consequence of printing money to pay workers who are consumers leading to more consumption and hence a drain on foreign exchange. The DLP did this explicitly knowing consequence but want to win back the government.


  19. @DD

    What do you think the sale of the bank means?

    On 29 January 2014 17:21, Barbados Underground


  20. David
    Apparently RBC Jamaica has been losing money for some years, partly due to crappy loans, including those acquired with the RBTT purchase.

    Looks like after closing 4 branches last year to reduce costs to restore profitability RBC just decided that there was no way it could get to an ROI it needed to justify carrying on in Jamaica.

    As the Gleaner says RBC is ridding itself of a โ€œLossmakerโ€

    Maybe Sagicor knows something the largest bank in Canada (and #35 in the world) does not know and can make Jamaica a profit maker.

  21. henderson bovell Avatar
    henderson bovell

    DLP Cabinet Minister Publicly Suggests That He Has “No Confidence” in Stated DLP Policies!

    Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?’
    That depends a good deal on where you want to get to,' said the Cat.I don’t much care where–‘ said Alice.
    Then it doesn't matter which way you go,' said the Cat.–so long as I get SOMEWHERE,’ Alice added as an explanation.
    Oh, you're sure to do that,' said the Cat,if you only walk long enough.’
    Alice felt that this could not be denied, so she tried another question. What sort of people live about here?'In THAT direction,’ the Cat said, waving its right paw round, lives a Hatter: and in THAT direction,' waving the other paw,lives a March Hare. Visit either you like: they’re both mad.’

    From Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

    Shortly before the recent general election date was announced, the DLP told the country that it had a “plan” and that it wanted more time. I recall having written an article in response, captioned: “More Time To Do What!” It now gets even more interesting!

    Less than two weeks after “Sleepy” Smith tells Stuart to “fire a Minister” and within days of Stuart saying that his Cabinet are “eminent persons,” Agriculture Minister David Estwick now signals to the country that he too has “no confidence” in the DLP’s savage and barbaric austerity programme!

    This is an extremely serious vote of no confidence in Fruendel Stuart himself because the Prime Minister was just invited by Her Majesty (who lives thousands of miles from Barbados in Britain) to sit in her Privy Council as an advisor. But within days of that announcement, one of Stuart’s own Cabinet colleagues who live right here in Barbados – is essentially telling Barbados, Britain and the world – that he does not trust or have confidence in the DLP’ austerity programme. “Eminent persons” or not, Minister do not assign themselves!

    This is interesting because a Minister of the alleged “eminent DLP Cabinet” now confirms that the DLP does not know the way forward! That essentially dismisses the wild allegation of DLP Ministers being “eminent,” given the literal interpretation of the word. David Estwick might be onto something! It is almost a year since it has been returned as the Government but no sign of any credible “plan,” and it remains “unclear,” exactly what the DLP is really doing, given the social, economic and now – political crisis and instability that exists in Barbados.

    You cannot have your “already weak, incompetent government” – now imploding in a social and economic crisis, where people are already reported to be shooting at the Police!

    Estwick knows that there was the announcement of a Medium Term Fiscal Strategy (MTFS) but that did not work, neither did the revised one! Estimates and Budgets were also delivered to fix problems that become worse. As an example, the August 2013 budget was supposed to fix the deficit but it somehow increased by some $145m. In a never-ending-series of trademark DLP blunders, a Mini-Budget and Ministerial Statement was then announced on December 13th 2013, which will not work either because the IMF tells us that at the end of March this year, the Deficit will still be some 9.5% of GDP! Essentially, that the gap will still be close to a billion dollars. Put another way, because of its fiscal recklessness and indiscipline, the DLP continues to spend a lot more than it has, but prefers to blame some ‘global crisis’ for causing it to have reduced revenue. David Estwick now removes that DLP’s excuse!
    He seems to be confirming that despite all the pain and sacrifices Barbadians are being pressured; bullied and compel to endure and make – the crisis for Barbados and Barbadians will get even worse That is precisely what “Team BLP” has been saying all along!

    But, with the country already downgraded to “JUNK” under its stewardship, and with it now beckoning ‘frantically’ to the IMF for rescue, while staring a devaluation in the face – where exactly does Barbados and do Barbadians expect to go or be taken by this-failed-DLP-Government? Even Estwick seems to be sounding the alarm that something is seriously wrong! It is only reasonable to assume that as a Cabinet Minister he would have access to information and be privy to discussions that mortals like me, would not see and hear! What is it that would scare a man that does not seem to even fear, fear itself? Barbadians should take note.

    The DLP has the largest Cabinet in the history of Barbadian politics. In fact, with a mere 267,000 people, the Barbados Cabinet is as large as President Obama’s America, which has a population of some 395 million people. DLP Ministers were not performing and the Cabinet was reshuffled. The Cabinet cannot be logically reshuffled anymore because that was done about 8-times already, since 2008! Albert Einstein has an explanation for that. He said that “insanity” is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

    Barbados! Where do you expect to go with this-failed-DLP-Government? In addition to causing a collapse of the Barbados economy, Business to close, Sector to fail, thousands to find themselves on the bread-line and poverty and the national debt to increase, there is one other thing the DLP can be credited for, that is – that it has destroyed the social partnership.

    The workers do no trust the DLP or union leaders and while the employers do not have any confidence in the DLP – because of its own incompetence – the DLP has manufactured a fiscal crisis, which is causing employers, workers, consumers, investors and the unions – severe discomfort.

    The DLP is a “dead-end” and an “unjustifiable cost overrun!” If there was no DLP-Government, there would be no discomfort or problem or threat of thousands losing their jobs or cause for private sector companies to collapse.

    The DLP is only now realising that you can bluff your way as Opposition but not as the Government. There are major problems, which needs fixing but the DLP simply cannot cope or function in this highly demanding environment. It is clearly not ready to lead! Six years after being elected, it still has its training wheels on. That explains its flawed “Anti-Barbarbadian Policies;” poor judgment and bad decisions!

    The DLP constitutes “bad government” and “horrible Governance.” There will be no confidence necessary to give Barbados a chance for any recovery or hope of growth, with the DLP as the Government. It is therefore frightening that bajans would ‘sit on their hands’ and wait for a miracle even while there is a capital flight from the country and despite the Church admitting that it will require a lot more than pray to rescue and restore Barbados. Minister Estwick seems to be emphasizing that point!

    The problem for Barbados is that the DLP simply does not know what to do! One minute is says it has to “wait and see,” then like Mr. Duplicity, it contradicts itself and says it is better to try a thing because doing something is better than doing nothing. So it tries to tax its way out of the recession it caused and when that did not work – it started firing thousands, which will cause and even deeper crisis and more human suffering! These are not numbers or statistics, these are Barbadians, families and lives being destroys. Broken families, but the DLP sees it as calculated casualties and collateral damage.

    Barbados: Where do you expect to go with this-failed-DLP-Government? There is nothing wrong with Barbados or Barbadians. The problem is, this failed-DLP-Government simply cannot cope but want to hold-on to power it cannot justify having and that makes it extremely dangerous. If Minister Estwick is concerned why are you not afraid, especially when you know that the DLP is a Government you cannot trust or afford?

    All eyes on you Mr. Stuart! Sleepy Smith told you: “fire a “Minister.”. I dare you! In fact, I double dare you!


  22. Go DLP….. I am behind ya’ll a 100% baby…..


  23. Could it be that Hal Austin resides else way? A sea bath would really help theorist for real boy….


  24. @David

    RBCโ€™s decision may not signal anything, they just couldnโ€™t compete with the behemoth in Jamaica i.e. Scotiabank so they have made a strategic decision to retreat and spend its money elsewhere, it is always the bottom line. RBC also pulled out of consumer banking in the US a few years ago and the write off was over a billion dollars. CIBC also retreated from the US after it got its nose bloodied when its online Banking project never caught on with US consumers.

    Donโ€™t cry for the Canadian banks they have a stranglehold in Canada where Branch banking is extensive and competition is fierce ( Branches open on Sundays) and are very profitable.


  25. ” there is one other thing the DLP can be credited for, that is โ€“ that it has destroyed the social partnership”

    That might very well have been a good thing albeit mistakenly. Mr Stuart once described the social partnership as a “philosophical absurdity” and never truer words has he ever spoken because any accommodation of positions between master and slave must be to the detriment of slave and the benefit of master.


  26. Tell Hal Austin and all those people who hate it that people in the tropics wear scanty cool clothing in order to keep cool and fresh to mind their own business.

    We do no make snide remarks about how his queen dresses.

    We do not ask if she smells frowsy under all those hot layers of clothes.

    We polite ’cause we is Bajans.

    In the tropics people sweat. There is nothing disgusting about fresh sweat. In the tropics we bathe regularly, two or more times a day. We do not stink.

    We do not make remarks about the excessive quantity of jewellry his queen wears. Some of the jewellry probably bought with the profits from the slave trade — sweat and blood diamonds, so to speak.

    The sweat and blood of Hal’s ancestors and mine.

    In Barbados people bathe twice a day or even more frequently if they have to attend meetings etc. They may sweat but they never smell stink when in company.

    Can Hal Austin tell us whether he bathe’s two or more times a day?

    More that once I have been on the subway in first world countries and early early in the morning I had to disembark because the people stank.

    And I don’t even like Mikey.

    And there is no need for our Parliamentarians to wear hot suits to do our business, First people dress up in hot suit, long pants, long sleeved shirts, jackets, ties, socks, enclosed shoes, because they want to please people like Hal, then they waste our tax money air conditioning the buildings down to 17 degrees celsius.

    Why?


  27. Pun a a morning on the ZR’s the people never stink.


  28. Sometime pun a’ evening they stink, but that is ok, because they have put in a hard day’s work in the hot hot sun.

    Nothing wrong with the smell of honest sweat.

    It is the smell of honestly earned money.

    And we all know that money does smells real, real sweet.


  29. Especially in these times.

  30. Caswell Franklyn Avatar
    Caswell Franklyn

    Charles Skeete

    If Freundel destroyed the social partnership it shows that he is still good for something.

    >


  31. I always have a problem with those hot black suits worm by black men in government and business setting, black people do generate excessive body head naturally, everyone knows that, so why do these men feel the need to wear these hot ass suits in that hot ass country, who is there to please by making your whole being uncomfortable….beats me, I honestly feel it interferes with their thought processes, just look at the present situation..

    As for Elizabeth Windsor in buckingham palace and all that jewellery she wears, not of it was bought, we can guarantee it was all stolen from someone’s ancestor, Africa, India, take your pick…..

    Guess what Bermudans wear, well of course Bermuda shorts and cotton shirts and while doing business………..it’s hot in the Caribbean.

    Yes, people do stink on the subways in the metropolises early in the morning, evening I can see, but morning means they did not bathe.


  32. should read:

    black people do generate excessive body heat naturally.

  33. De Real Political Intelligence Avatar
    De Real Political Intelligence

    Henderson Bovell’s time would be better spent under an inflatable doll. At least then he would be able to relieve himself lawfully. I hope to Christ his case has not been settled. Rant and rave and choke on your spittle if possible. Every rational Barbadian knows that this DLP is the best government for Barbados at this time. Even Bees say it. You got four more years of it. Jerking off is more pleasurable than frustrating yourself with shite talk every day on a blog. And for those who want to bring down a duly elected Government bout here: I want your ass in jail yesterday. Got some men waiting for Bovell’s perverted red ass.And Belle’s old one.


  34. Many Barbadians can careless who manage government, didn’t 4,000 voters separate the two parties? What we care about is effective government.

  35. George C. Brathwaite Avatar
    George C. Brathwaite

    @ De Real Political Intelligence

    You wrote: “Every rational Barbadian knows that this DLP is the best government for Barbados at this time. Even Bees say it.”

    Can I suggest that you become the official spokesperson for Barbados on local and international affairs. Freundel Stuart should without hesitation have you as an addition in the largest ever non-performing Cabinet. I am sure that your presence would not make a difference.

    I beg of you, do not speak for every Bajan in the future, and certainly, never speak for me please.


  36. charles skeete

    Why must see the relationship between employee and employer and comparable to master and slave? Is that sum total of the benefit derived from free education.

  37. henderson bovell Avatar
    henderson bovell

    Time Running Out For Barbados, “Phase 3” of DLP’ Crisis, Triggered

    “Whether one believes or not, religion is as real a force in the life of the world as economics or politics, and it demands fair-minded attention. Even if you think the entire religious enterprise is at best misguided and at worst counterproductive, it remains vital, inspiring great good and, sometimes, great evil.” – Jon Meacham

    A few month ago, I wrote an article under the caption: “Barbados’ Nightmare (A Vulgar Threesome) The DLP, the Church and Trade Unions!” I wrote then:

    “It is, however, clear – that whatever workers, the unemployed, the oppressed and Barbadians decide to do to rescue their country; put it on a progressive path; stop this DLP madness and acquire relief for themselves and a fresh start for this country – they will have to do it without expecting any support or endorsement from the Church or the Unions, who seem to think that their role is to worship, serve, protect and defend the DLP and endorse its vulgar stupidity, even while the country sinks.”

    That – even before the Church was heard sending a crystal clear message to workers that if they do not want to work, they should go home! Of course, incorrectly suggesting that this-dead-end- DLP-Government had some innovative “plan” for Barbados but since people were not “working,” the country is now in this ‘perilous fiscal crisis.’

    Naturally, the Church is not interested in the fact that it was sending a message to the very workers who were tricked and betrayed by this failed-DLP-Government and who are now terrified about losing their jobs at the hands of the very Government that promised to protect them (but carefully concealing its deadly plot to feed them to the wolves, once re-elected). A more fitting Sermon, especially given who was in the congregation – might have come from “Luke 22: New International Version (NIV)”

    Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

    22ย Now the Festival of Unleavened Bread, called the Passover, was approaching, 2ย and the chief priests and the teachers of the law were looking for some way to get rid of Jesus, for they were afraid of the people. 3ย Then Satan entered Judas, called Iscariot, one of the Twelve. 4ย And Judas went to the chief priests and the officers of the temple guard and discussed with them how he might betray Jesus. 5ย They were delighted and agreed to give him money. 6ย He consented, and watched for an opportunity to hand Jesus over to them when no crowd was present.

    It is not without significance that at a time when there is a social, economic and political crisis and instability in Barbados, Union Leaders are running away and calling it a day, while (apart from Reverend Charles Morris) the Church is silent, despite this being a time to provide for the body and soul of the entire country.

    The sad part is, this Government did not want to talk; it was not prepared to listen or accept well-reasoned-advice; neither was it prepared to discuss policy issue. It just pretended that it was on-top of things and that the economy was “stable.” I guess it never expected the “truth” which it held hostage – would have escaped!

    Because of its “anti-Barbadian-Policies and vigorous pursuit and defense of its fatted calf doctrine, this failed-DLP-Government will fire thousands of persons engaged with the Public Service of Barbados – tomorrow, (Friday, January 31st, 2014) and subject them to a “one hundred per cent (100%) pay cut” – kicking-them down “the dark highway to poverty,” but “unproductive-DLP-Ministers” will still expect their full-pay (albeit an unjustified cost overrun on the Treasury) at the end of February and will further be expecting that they will be allowed to keep their jobs for the next four-years, so they can ‘waste more time;’ cause further human suffering and “loiter around on the crime-scene long enough’ to claim pension – despite causing a social, economic and political crisis and instability, in Barbados – as confirmed in recent days by a DLP Cabinet Minister who now tells the country what it already knows: that the DLP is on the wrong path.

    It never occurred to him nor the DLP, that with such confusion, contradiction, chaos and human suffering, nobody in their right-mind could be tricked into believing that Barbados was on any “pathway to progress!”
    And I suppose the Dems never thought that blaming a global financial crisis for its dangerous mismanagement of Barbados – would have become such a big turn-off!

    “Honesty, integrity, and accountability, the values, which should be the hallmark of this government, have instead been thrown under the bus by an arrogant majority, casualties in a misguided campaign to shield from accountability those who abuse this House.” – Louise Slaughter


  38. @Henderson Bovell “the Church was heard sending a crystal clear message to workers that if they do not want to work, they should go home!”

    But isn’t that priest/pastor/reverend a DLP yardie? Nobody takes yardies seriously.

    No one priest/pastor/reverend speaks for the church.

    Not even the Pope.

    Those days dun.


  39. @Henderson Bovell “Union Leaders are running away”

    Henderson the current union leaders are old, old men.

    We should not begrudge them the time at home to play with their grandchildren, and great grand children.

    Barbados in the 21st century has to be steered by 21st century leaders.

    We thank the 20th century union, political, and church leaders for their dedication, and their service.


  40. @Henderson Bovell “DLP-Government will fire thousands of persons engaged with the Public Service of Barbados โ€“ tomorrow, (Friday, January 31st, 2014) and subject them to a โ€œone hundred per cent (100%) pay cutโ€ โ€“ kicking-them down โ€œthe dark highway to poverty,โ€

    Politicians like to make a lot of promises to gullible people.

    You know as well as I do that a part of our problem now is the foolish amendment that the BLP made to the constitution that the govenment cannot cut civil servant salaries.

    At the time I said to myself how can a government be so foolish as to promise such?

    How can they promise how much to pay, when nobody can accurately forecast the future?

    But the BLP had gone head and promised the people that we will guarantee that we will never to cut your pay.

    So now the government cannot cut pay, so it has to massively cut staff.

    Honestly can anybody on this blog say that cutting people is less harmful than cutting salaries?

    Simple Simon, neither B nor D.


  41. Simple Simon wrote “now is the foolish amendment that the BLP made to the constitution that the government cannot cut civil servant salaries”

    That has turned out to be a political benefit to the BLP. People will only remember how many civil servants were sent home.


  42. @simple simon
    “Barbados in the 21st century has to be steered by 21st century leaders.

    AMEN!

  43. Caswell Franklyn Avatar

    Simple Simon

    You seem to believe the nonsense about cutting wages and salaries to save jobs. Nothing is farther from the truth. If Government wants assistance from the IMF, the way Barbados does business must fit into the IMF model. So according to the IMF Barbados had 6,000 people employed in the public service than we should have. That is why people have to go home. Challenge the Government to deny that.

    If you want to save money you don’t send home the lowest paid workers.

    In addition you can’t cut salaries of non civil servants without their consent. To do so would be dismissal. Why should it be any different for public officers who have children to support and bills to pay just like any other worker.

    Are you aware, that it is not lawful to cut salaries of persons at statutory boards without their consent. Bear in mind that it was done before but the bought and paid for unions did not challenge it then.

    >


  44. “Why must see the relationship between employee and employer and comparable to master and slave? Is that sum total of the benefit derived from free education”

    That might very well have been a good thing albeit mistakenly. Mr Stuart once described the social partnership as a โ€œphilosophical absurdityโ€ and never truer words has he ever spoken because any accommodation of positions between employer and employee must be to the detriment of employee and the benefit of employer. Perhaps I ought to pay less attention to the views of Mr Trevor Marshall.


  45. Simple Simon wrote โ€œnow is the foolish amendment that the BLP made to the constitution that the government cannot cut civil servant salariesโ€

    Why should an amendment to prevent the cutting of workers salaries be now considered foolish because it does not conform with the current political agenda. Did not the Unions spend thousands of dollars in legal battles to prevent the cutting of salaries? Do you know that the salaries of Judges and top level public officers were not subject to cut? Was it a fact that the salaries of Parliamentarians were increased prior to the last cut? Why should workers be made to suffer because of bad policy decisions?
    A salary cut in any form or disguise is a cut. I do not subscribe to the notion currently propagandised that the amendment preventing the cutting of public workers’ salaries/wages is contributing to the economic woes now facing the country and is the fountain of all evil. I think that public workers ought to be highly commended by us all for the sacrifices they have made despite the unprecedented rise in the high cost of living to accept without dissent the salary cut imposed upon them in the last four years as a result of the inability of the Government to pay salary increases.


  46. Unfortunately Mr. Skeete whether we accept your subjective view or the rule of thumb used by the international financial entities like the IMF the government must generate money to pay salaries and when there is none crappau smoke yuh pipe.

  47. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ charles skeete | January 31, 2014 at 7:46 AM |
    โ€œ..Do you know that the salaries of Judges and top level public officers were not subject to cut? Was it a fact that the salaries of Parliamentarians were increased prior to the last cut?โ€

    Is there any economic justification or moral reason for this kind of โ€œapartheidโ€ system of remuneration?
    Would this crap continue when salaries across the entire public sector will have to be cut in the coming months as part of the national sacrifice needed to fight the fiscal haemorrhaging that will soon be taking place as tax revenues plummet and debt servicing demands skyrocket?

    Why must only the people at the bottom carry the bulk of the sacrifices. Why not demand sacrifices from the GG to the Ministers of the Crown to the Judges to ordinary MPs; with a โ€˜super taxโ€™ on those highly paid executives in the private sector.

    These top feeders from the taxpayersโ€™ pocket are the ones more capable of handling the economic strain for the sake of the nation that feeds them rather than the poor, unemployed and those whose reverse tax credits have been cut in half and subject to possible total elimination.

  48. henderson bovell Avatar

    All eyes on you Mr. Stuart!

    Sir. Frederick โ€œSleepy” Smith has already advised you to: “fire a “Minister.” And in fact, a Minister has now practically fired himself!

    That now raises the question: how weak is the Prime Minister and to what extent: will he pretend not to notice; or even hear Dr. Estwick’s recent comments or tolerate Estwickโ€™s apparent indiscipline [publicly questions the โ€œpathโ€ selected by the Cabinet of which he is a member and policies he collectively agrees to, as a member of Cabinet] versus – how badly does Mr. Stuart likes and wants to continue being Prime Minister and will therefore say nothing and hope the country does not notice that (in addition to there being a social and economic crisis and instability – Barbados now has a political crisis and political instability.

  49. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ henderson bovell | January 31, 2014 at 10:17 AM |

    If I were you HB I will not be too keen to see this DLP administration fall (by democratic means of course), just yet.
    I had given them 18-24 months to be forced by the IMF to clean up the economic mess they created over the last 3 years by a total lack of competence and sound decision-making.

    Let them continue to stew for a few more months in their own โ€œNo Layoffs & No privatizationโ€ lying juices. They must first layoff the so-called excess workers and privatize those entities earmarked by the IMF for such divestment treatment before they are themselves laid off permanently from the governance landscape of Barbados.
    When greedy wait, hot will cool, Mr. B!

    Or should you be telling the Fumbler: โ€œWhen liโ€™l man put on big man pants, โ€ฒe must tek whaโ€™ he getโ€?

  50. henderson bovell Avatar

    @ millertheanunnaki

    Your wise counsel and well-reasoned advice is noted and warmly received. Be well and God bless!

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