Banner promoting anonymous crime reporting with a phone and contact number 1 800 TIPS (8477), featuring the Crime Stoppers logo and a QR code for submitting tips.

← Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Submitted by William Skinner
Peter Wickham political scientist ‘...gets almost all his polls right and has only missed one big one here...’
Peter Wickham ‘…gets almost all his polls right and has only missed one big one here…’

At some point, an individual has to look at life and determine whether it is going the direction he or she would want it to. Countries must do the same. As I survey the political scene and pay rapt attention to the rapidly decaying socio – political environment, I am forced to ask myself if Barbadians are really serious about the direction the country is taking.

It is obvious to all objective citizens that the country is in turmoil as it transitions from the quaint little village to the world stage. A stage for which it failed to prepare. Hal Austin, a regular contributor to this blog, got it right sometime ago, when he opined, that we were perhaps fooled by the praise that we constantly heaped upon ourselves and that which others gave us. We were told by the world’s top diplomat that we were “punching above our weight”. We bestowed the title great economist on former Prime Minister Owen Arthur. We declared Errol Barrow the father of the nation. We have thrown about the word brilliant with great carelessness. For example, Leader of the Opposition Mia Mottley has been accused of being brilliant! We are a people who declared we had the best of everything: the best education system; the best roads; the best hospital; the best schools and of course a literacy rate of 97% percent.

The irony of the situation is that all of the above is very true when we look at other Caribbean islands. Anybody visiting our sister islands would have to agree that Barbados does have the best schools in terms of construction; the best roads although ours are in a state of disrepair in many cases; the best hospital of any that is used by the entire public, never mind we cannot get the accident and emergency department to function properly and of course we are rather literate. We have Cave Hill producing graduates on par with any of our neighbours; never mind employers say that some of our graduates cannot understand basic arithmetic and English. So what am I complaining or criticizing? Well, we have all these positives and yet we seem very determined to turn them all into negatives. Almost forgot, we have the best public transportation system although we can never make it profitable and our rolling stock is hitting the road with bumpers and fenders missing. Of course the failure to maintain the buses ensures that about 30 or 40per cent are either parked waiting for parts or have been forced to early vehicle graves by bad driving habits.

I now come to our incredible democracy. Every five or so years, we enjoy three weeks of hectic campaigning. And yes, once again, we can brag that it is probably the most incident free elections anywhere in the world. Nobody gets killed. I think a few decades back, Muhammad Nasser got cut with a bottle throwing thing but I don’t think that it ever made court. No problem. Gone are the days of the half bottle of rum and a few soda/eclipse biscuits with our treasured corn beef. We have transitioned to giving the voters: lap tops, iPods, top end cell phones and Sir Grantley’s image looms large in hands and pockets. According to our dithering, Charlie Chaplin (Silent Movies) Prime Minister, Mr. Freundel Stewart, he actually saw money passing during the last elections. Imagine the Prime Minister witnessing crimes in broad daylight and not one report to the police. Not one arrest. What a crime free democracy!

No more under forties debating the pros and cons of independence; no more exceptional grass roots politicians such as: Lionel Weeks, and Lloyd Smith. Not a Mencea Cox or Ronald Map. No Neville Boxills in site. Oh no, those guys use to throw the occasional jab but talk about policies and were close to their constituents. Even a very well educated fellow like Frederick “sleepy “Smith was down to earth. And according to a young man, whom I have great respect for, Mr.Peter Wickham, that particular breed has no place in his modern Barbados political make up. As far as he is concerned Hamilton Lashley was the last of that ilk. Sad thing, Wickham may be right!

Well, Wickham represents the new breed, armed with a university education and a profession grounded in political science and polling. He is a highly sought after political scientist. He gets almost all his polls right and has only missed one big one here- the very last one when Charlie Chaplin overcame all the fancy sound effects! Maybe if there were more of the above mentioned grassroots politicians, his polls would be more accurate because people back then were a bit more genuine.Oops…

Allow me to close with our esteemed labor movement. In the current debacle regarding the severing of 3000 according to the DLP or soon to be at least 10,000 workers according to the BLP, the unions find themselves out to sea. They are suggesting policies after the so-called Minister of Finance; Mr. Chris Sinkler has enunciated the policy on the floor of the house. I say so –called because Mr. David Estwick is apparently acting as Minister of Finance today (Thursday 12th. Feb 2014) when he presents his own personal views to cabinet to rescue the economy. Just like the unions, he is presenting policies to stop retrenchment of workers AFTER the retrenchment has commenced. Brilliant!

So the workers are left to another regular contributor of this blog, Caswell Franklyn, to defend them while their president runs up cell phone bills in the thousands. Now I don’t know much about wages in our public sector but I seriously believe that $6000 could have kept one of those workers on the pay roll for quite a few weeks or even six months. But the NUPW does not have that kind of strike fund. Modern unions have: Excessive Use of Cell Phones by Presidents Funds! I digress. The workers voice is now Caswell. Now I have quoted, to support my little contribution, two regular contributors to this blog: Caswell Franklyn and Hal Austin. Note I have not attempted to big up anybody from the mainstream press because the problem we have, is that mainstream Barbados, has crashed like mainstream Wall Street and that caused all the confusion.

Stay way from mainstream Barbados thinking and we may just survive this crisis. And a great shout out to Pachamama. Thanks for BU. Sometimes a nation (newspaper) has to take a look at itself.


Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

247 responses to “Barbados at the Crossroads”


  1. Anyone hear about QEH and money transfers to Trinidad?


  2. Just like Hurricanes we should start naming earth tremors/shakes. I have go a few names, in a hat ,that are synonymous with people who have already shook this little rock off its foundation .Many people are still quivering from recent upheavals and more to come.

  3. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926TO 2014 MASSIVE FRAUD LANDTAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS, BARBADOS DLP/BLP MASSIVE PONZI FRAUD Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926TO 2014 MASSIVE FRAUD LANDTAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS, BARBADOS DLP/BLP MASSIVE PONZI FRAUD

    Enuff | February 18, 2014 at 5:58 PM |

    Anyone hear about QEH and money transfers to Trinidad?@

    Tell it , if you know it ,,,,,


  4. The 6:00 pm News Update at barbadostoday.com has Dr Carol Phillips saying Barbados should turn to Nigeria to help pull itself out of its economic problems.

    Ya sure – first send $10 million to Nigeria, and they will then help


  5. DD

    You what? They would have to be mad.


  6. The location of the quake east of north is quite different from the one we felt in 2007 off Dominica which was west of north.

    This one was in the Atlantic Ocean.

    The one in 2007 was in the Caribbean Sea.

    Would be interesting to hear a seismologist on the difference.

    Ms. Thomas should get us some information so we can judge for ourselves.


  7. three days and counting that mia’gimmick’ mottley had asked for CS and PM stuart to be fired forthwith,, does anybody know what is the outcome,


  8. @Robert Ross and Due Diligence:

    So what is wrong with the suggestion by Dr Carol Philips? Notwithstanding the scams from Nigeria, the country is doing very well and is awash with cash, similar to Mexico,Indonisia Turkey (MINT) economies.Besides, the BRICS (Brazil,Russia,India China, south Africa), the MINTS are the new emerging economies that are doing extremely well under the current circumstances and Barbados should look to these economies for some debt relief and target markets for manufactered goods and Tourism.

    Word of advice: Start subscribing and reading Economist Magazine and the likes and get a broader open minded prospective on what is happening and not to be too judgemental based on perception.


  9. John | February 18, 2014 at 8:25 PM |
    This one was in the Atlantic Ocean.
    The one in 2007 was in the Caribbean Sea.
    …………………………………………………………..
    Perhaps I am wrong, but isn’t the Caribbean Sea part of the Atlantic Ocean?

  10. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Thinker | February 18, 2014 at 8:58 PM |
    “Start subscribing and reading Economist Magazine and the likes and get a broader open minded prospective on what is happening and not to be too judgemental based on perception.”

    Your general point is taken. The policy and decision makers in Bim need to have a more helicopter approach to the shifting economic and financial paradigms taking place in the world.

    However any recommendation to look to Nigeria for immediate financial bail out is a dream of a person living in cloud cuckoo land.
    When a country that has some of the ‘finest’ crude oil on the planet that flows from the ground like water flows over Angels Falls has to import all its finished petroleum products and its electricity supply is reliable as a Transport Bus to Mount Misery in Barbados then you have to take such proposals with a pinch of salt.

    Nigeria has to fix its own economy first in many ways than one before it can even talk about lending a helping hand to a fellow black country that is way above it in the UN Human Development index.

    BTW, who ‘runs’ Nigeria Airways? Virgin?


  11. Nigeria and other developing countries are always the whipping boys when the subject of corruption is discussed. This report from the EU reveals that corruption in Europe is widespread and cost the European economy 120 billion a year, that’s “Billion”.

    So what does Transparency International say about those countries?

    http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/home-affairs/what-we-do/policies/organized-crime-and-human-trafficking/corruption/anti-corruption-report/index_en.htm


  12. @Miller

    Regarding problems associated with Nigeria’s Oil industry, you should blame the Majors (Shell) in particular . Pure highway robbery and environmental mismanagement on the part of the multinationals,plus a culture of corrupt politicians fuels caused by the “dutch desease. By now Nigeria should be in a position to completely nationalize its Oil industry and run it efficiently. Nigeria Airways has been defunct since 2003 . Again, allowing big cooperations to run our own affairs. British Airways!!

    BTW Get a copy of Economist Magasine Jan18th-24th edition and read the special report on Tech Start ups. Barbadians can leant alot!!!


  13. ac | February 18, 2014 at 8:39 PM |
    three days and counting that mia’gimmick’ mottley had asked for CS and PM stuart to be fired forthwith,, does anybody know what is the outcome

    Far from an outcome the attendance at Mia’s National People’s Assembly was rivaled by the attendance at a Kellman branch meeting. That should tell Mottley she is on a hiding to nothing. There is no traction whatsoever in her shrill cries for elections, marches and protest. At least she stops short of calling for the violent overthrow of the government coming from sources at UWI. Now one more communist is calling for the Government’s overthrow. Commissiong is a bigger failure politically then George Belle, Elombe and that ilk why would that idiot expect any person to listen to him. Barbados must settle down the private sector should lead the way by creating enterprises in the enabling environment government has provided e.g the renewable energy sector. GOB must get its capital projects going and stop the promising that projects will soon start. When the private sector and gob start generating projects the economy should pick up and take much of the unemployment with it. In the meantime Mia Mottley doesn’t even sound as if she is convinced of whatever it is she is trying to accomplish. She is reduced to begging the unions to protest and march. Time to give it a rest Mia.


  14. @ Clarkson
    It’s the economy stupid, so get a handle on it and you can then ignore Mia, Commissiong, Belle, Estwick and all the other nuisances.

  15. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ thinker | February 18, 2014 at 10:29 PM |
    “Regarding problems associated with Nigeria’s Oil industry, you should blame the Majors (Shell) in particular . Pure highway robbery and environmental mismanagement on the part of the multinationals,plus a culture of corrupt politicians fuels caused by the “dutch desease.”

    Although you are right to point a big finger at the MNC’s shouldn’t we be apportioning most of the blame on the corrupt leaders who have raped the Nigerian economy since taking over from the same colonials in the 1960’s?
    Shell Nigeria has had Nigerian managing directors since the 80’s. What have they done other than carry out the instructions and meet expectations of the white masters?

    Have the Nigerian millionaires invested in the infrastructural development of the country or have they salted away millions of the country’s oil revenues in offshore accounts much of it aided and abetted by Europeans.

    Why didn’t the Nigerian billionaire who invested in Gatwick Airport not done the same for Abuja or Lagos?

    The black leaders of Nigeria since Independence are accused of wasting, siphoning off and misappropriating an estimated US $380 billion from the Nigerian economy; including th estimated
    £ 5 billion stolen by Abacha and stashed away in Swiss bank accounts.
    The people of Ogoni and the family of Ken Saro-Wiwa are still in pain.

    Maybe Barbados can approach a Swiss banker acting on behalf of the Nigerians instead of looking towards the Arabs in the UAE for the $5 billion.


  16. Boy Blue | February 18, 2014 at 9:27 PM |

    John | February 18, 2014 at 8:25 PM |
    This one was in the Atlantic Ocean.
    The one in 2007 was in the Caribbean Sea.
    …………………………………………………………..
    Perhaps I am wrong, but isn’t the Caribbean Sea part of the Atlantic Ocean?
    +++++++++++++++++++++

    … or is it the other way!!

  17. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ Clarkson | February 18, 2014 at 10:53 PM |
    “Mia Mottley doesn’t even sound as if she is convinced of whatever it is she is trying to accomplish. She is reduced to begging the unions to protest and march. Time to give it a rest Mia.”

    You said the same thing when you punished with laughter her motion to debate the CLICO scandal. And what is CLICO today other than a huge embarrassment and financial scandal that would retard economic recovery through fear by people investing their savings in similar schemes and has killed of the sugar industry?

    You took the same position when she regularly identified and criticized the DLP profligacy and mismanagement of the economy since 2009.

    You supported Sinckliar when she showed no confidence in the MoF and the Guv of the CB. However, her position was subsequently backed up by the IMF.

    W know Mia is incapable of bringing down the current administration on her own.
    But we certainly know one who can. And that is the person you should betaken up with; not big-mouth Mia.


  18. Thinker

    Oritsematosan says ‘Please do not assume we have not thought.’

    Boy Blue

    One ocean; one land; one humanity.

  19. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926TO 2014 MASSIVE FRAUD LANDTAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS, BARBADOS DLP/BLP MASSIVE PONZI FRAUD Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926TO 2014 MASSIVE FRAUD LANDTAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS, BARBADOS DLP/BLP MASSIVE PONZI FRAUD

    What makes Mia Mottley brilliant?@ iN WHAT FRAUD?
    Be real she need to be in jail, Britton’s Hill cave in , where she buy the land from ? Who give her Permission to build over a cave? Why was she not charge in the deaths,? Where is her deeds of land we never sold her / MIA brilliant at what FRAUD and Murder?


  20. Nurses and Orderlies being sent home from QEH at the end of the month. Meeting was held yesterday. Patient care will be compromised


  21. It is hard to believe nurses are being sent home? Didn’t we just discuss a shortage of supply and Inniss the MoH at the time advised the government had ploughed some resources in the BCC program to train nurses?


  22. Barbadians are given two options/solutions to dealing with the economy…..BLP SELL AND GET THE DEBT DOWN known as privatization…which means that bajans would own less and have little or no say so in the running of their country …new owners being private or foreign investors,,,,,, ,,DLP MANAGE WHAT LITTLE IS LEFT OF OUR OWNERSHIP…sacrifice to keep it under bajan control guaranteeing that the inheritors and benefactor (barbadians) would be the true , deserving and and rightful owners,,,,…


  23. BTW the pm says there was a report from 2001 which had called for ten thousand workers under blp govt to be retrenched and like the alexander issue the BLP ignored …..


  24. MORE MIA ‘GIMMICK”MOTTLEY FROM ‘RUBBING SHOULDERS ;” to RUBBISH TALK,… pick of the day,,,,,,,,people must speak out,,,,,,,,


  25. @ac

    Do you every try to apply analysis to anything put out by the DLP? If there was indeed a report which recommeded the public service be cut by 10,000 to 26,000 why has the DLP since 2008 increased the numbers by a reported 3,000?


  26. Do you every try to apply analysis to anything put out by the DLP? If there was indeed a report which recommeded the public service be cut by 10,000 to 26,000 why has the DLP since 2008 increased the numbers by a reported 3,000
    ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
    david where are your facts or proof that the DLp increased the public service by 3000…..when over and over again the blp was saying how govt had laid off people through the period of 2008 and 2013 ,,many yardfowls and news paper periodicals was stating that


  27. @ac

    You can have the last word.


  28. Isn’t it time that all those who say ‘There was a report that’ or similar provide evidence of it? And most certainly if it was in the public domain. One would expect this at least from those who are party hacks. Otherwise it’s just posturing.


  29. This report business is the game the politicos play. It makes for good politics.


  30. @ RR
    “Otherwise it’s just posturing”

    …and how would you classify your letter to the editor today criticizing the priest who, quite reasonably, called on Bajan workers to earn their pay with an honest day’s work?
    What the hell is wrong with suggesting to workers who dishonestly insist on not performing their duties effectively, that they GO HOME?

    ….oh wait….that would hit really hard at a lawyer wouldn’t it?!?
    That almost DEFINES that particular profession doesn’t it?!?

    ….and then for a lawyer to be asking how many days the priest works is as low as one can go…REALLY!!!
    How about……whenever there is a crisis / death/ sickness/ pain/ conflict/ need among his community …..day or night.
    Lending an understanding and supportive shoulder to all and sundry as needed…even to low minded lawyers when THEIR time comes – as it always does…

    That was your worse writing EVER Ross!….and that assessment is from a bushman who don’t have many kind words for priests – largely because they tend to undervalue and besmirch the TRUE role of spiritual ambassadors in our societies….


  31. Bush Tea

    LOL. Is it published? I didn’t know. IF you think it’s my “worst” ever there must be some truth in it I guess.

    BTW – I suppose you saw the piece last Monday, the report of a sermon by the Rector of St Mathias who said much the same thing? I was afraid mine had become dated. In that sense you missed the point – nothing new I suppose.

    The things you mention – it’s called pastoral work and goes with the job but many neglect it and don’t ‘visit’ any more.

    But “posturing”? HARDLY. I leave that to the wallahs on here who shout their mouths off but otherwise skulk from their bath chairs and do sod all – no guts you see.

  32. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ ac | February 19, 2014 at 6:11 AM |
    “Barbadians are given two options/solutions to dealing with the economy…..BLP SELL AND GET THE DEBT DOWN known as privatization…which means that bajans would own less and have little or no say so in the running of their country …new owners being private or foreign investors,,,,,, ,,DLP MANAGE WHAT LITTLE IS LEFT OF OUR OWNERSHIP…sacrifice to keep it under bajan control guaranteeing that the inheritors and benefactor (barbadians) would be the true , deserving and and rightful owners,,,,…”

    You were also arguing quite vehemently prior to December 13th that the DLP administration would never send home public sector workers. Now you are the biggest backer of the volte-faced decision imposed by the IMF.

    In a few months you will also change your tune and become the greatest proponent of privatization when the government is forced to “divest” itself of most commercial enterprises as it is again backed into the devaluation corner.
    We are ready to place a microphone in your hand.

    It will be interesting to see how the yet-to-be-finished St. John polyclinic will be outfitted and staffed. That should be your main concern. But you can practice some “Kellmaniac” economics and fire temporary workers to engage them as permanent workers. Those nurses and orderlies to be fired from the QEH would soon be rehired as permanent fixtures at the St. John white elephant soon to be a mausoleum.


  33. LOL @ Ross
    Touché !!! …Great response.
    Bushie was hoping to get you to respond to the productivity of lawyers vis a vis priests…..and to justify your concerns about how many days the priest work per week….considering the universal concern about how lawyers DONT do one shiite – while holding on to people’s life savings…..and delaying justice – FOR DECADES.

    …and then gravitating to parliament where wunna lawyers manage to fcuk up the whole society – while (as typified by Freundel) not doing a shiite… Well – except securing a life pension and various incidentals….

    You should focus on the BEAM in your own eye before writing long letters to the editor about a priest’s eyes – which have in nothing but a reflection of your own malady….


  34. Bush Tea

    Sadly you are STILL missing the main point of the letter I suppose because it serves your interest. The MAIN point was the idea of priests sucking up to politicians in the name of what……? That sermon would have been fine IF it had not been delivered before Fumble and his secret seven at THIS time – when people were losing their jobs. But read it again, dear BT.

    But – and here’s the rub – Rogers talked of workers having second jobs either actually or metaphorically. Thing is – so do many Anglican priests including Rogers. I think that was a fair observation for me to make, don’t you? And also to raise the question of how you measure a man’s productivity and, in particular, a priestly productivity. I said nothing about the number of days a priest works – which is not the issue.

    Now: assuming everything you have always said about attorneys is right (and I don’t always disagree with you), are your little grey cells capable of applying all that to the clergy? Or are you worried about the safety of your soul?


  35. Are you sure it Bushie that is missing the main point?

    So the message should be seen from the perspective of who is in the audience? Bushie was of the opinion that the message should be seen purely from it’s epistemological perspective.
    You seem to be saying that since it could be construed to be supportive of Fumble’s layoffs then the priest should have chosen another message….? …NONSENSE….

    Indeed the message could more logically be construed to be saying to Freundel that if HE and his lot are unable to do the work that they undertook, then THEY should go home…

    The FACT is that what the priest said was generally SOUND, logical, reasonable, practical and most importantly, RELEVANT.

    Now what the hell is wrong with holding two jobs? …except of course when these overlap?
    So a fellow who is paid from 8 to 4 to be an employee of company A should not ALSO be working for company B between 8 and 4….which was the point gleaned from the presentation.

    HOWEVER what is wrong with working for company B from 5pm to 10pm?
    What is wrong with a lawyer working for two, three, ten different clients at the same time? Does he not bill for the time done on each job separately?

    …and what is wrong with a priest having a part time job to supplement his salary? …or indeed – with a plumber being a part time priest?!?!

    Clearly you did not stay at a Holiday Inn before writing that critique of the reverent gentleman….. 🙂


  36. BT

    Oh dear…nothing wrong with two jobs – I didn’t say there was. I simply pointed out the hypocrisy in Comrade Rogers who denigrated those who had them while holding two himself. BT, you are reading what you want to read.

    But no – he was not talking about Fumble. He’s far too smart for that.

    But write a reply. That would be fun.


  37. @ miller

    Those DLP supporters like “ac” et, never ceases to amaze me. When Stuart was promising not to lay-off civil servants, while accusing the privatization programme suggested by the BLP as one which would lead to thousands of public sector lay-offs, got the support of DLP yard-fowls. Now public workers are being retrenched, these same yard-fowls are saying it is for the good of the country.

    The BLP has been making suggestions to this DLP administration, ad nauseam, but only solicited responses such as, “you has 14 years, it’s now our turn” and “if you have suggestions, put them in writing, we don’t want to hear nothing from you”, from Jones and Sinckler respectively. Suggestions were coming from, Ryan Straughn, BCCI, IMF, Moody’s, Standards and Poors, Michael Howard, and many other Barbadians who all have the interest of Barbados at heart. However, they were all accused of being supporters of the BLP.

    The DLP must be commended for their political strategy. They are sending subliminal messages to the public that the initiatives employed by the BLP to inform the electorate of the economic problems facing the society and the resulting failures of those policies advanced by thise present administration, such as the rubbing shoulders and the recent assembly forums, as an exercise to stir up unrest, marches, even riots. The yard-fowls have, as is the expected result, been constantly bombarding the blogs and call-in- programs with this message, which only serves to change the focus from the failed policies of this inept government.


  38. That is the problem that we have been having in Canada that priests have been part time plumbers.
    Fifty priests are killed in a bus tour accident and end up at the pearly gates, before they are let in St Peter asks who among you has been playing around with little boys…..49 hands go up. St. Peter says you can all go down to hell…..and take that deaf bastard with you.
    In the catholic church before marriage you have to take a course given by a priest on how marriage works, with that in mind it is not surprising they would have an opinion on work.

  39. Formerly Middle Class Avatar
    Formerly Middle Class

    A Transport Board bus to St john “breaks down” on Monday night, the driver informs the passengers that the bus has run out of diesel and apologises for the fact that he cannot get them home on time but refuses to apologise for Transport Board because they have decided that they are only putting ” a certain amount” of diesel in the buses.

    So it seems when are catching a TB bus nowadays you have to look at the gas gauge when you are getting in.


  40. Lawson…LOL

    On stage in a minute. You are NOT wide of the mark. More later.


  41. Robert I see you in the paper today, all well an fine everyone is entitled to there 15 seconds of fame but I urge you and all those on the blog to take a read of the Bible once again…

    “If the world hates you, remember that it hated Me first. The world would love you as one of its own if you belonged to it, but you are no longer part of the world. I chose you to come out of the world, so it hates you. Do you remember what I told you? ‘A slave is not greater than the master.’ Since they persecuted Me, naturally they will persecute you. And if they had listened to Me, they would listen to you. They will do all this to you because of Me, for they have rejected the one who sent Me. They would not be guilty if I had not come and spoken to them. But now they have no excuse for their sin.” John 15: 18-22

    Continue with prayer and God


  42. Write a reply for what….?
    How would YOU know that he was not talking about Fumble?
    How could it be Hypocrisy when there are “two jobs” ….and “two jobs” as Bushie pointed out…?

    LOL you are SO backed into a small corner that Bushie will rest at this point….

    Next time look at your own profession before accusing others…..

    LOL…be more like balance 🙂


  43. It’s sad to see how the lunatics (with special reference to our politicians, our business community and their supporters) have taken over the asylum called Barbados. With each passing day news leaks out that an approach has been made or consideration is been given by Barbados to establish economic, social and political ties with countries other than the UK, USA or Canada.
    Not so very long ago it was China, than India, followed by numerous other countries. A couple of days ago it was UAE, Colombia and today I had to check my calendar just to check that it was not April’s fool’s day (April 1st) as I had read that Barbados appears to be coveting NIGERIA!!!!!! The Ten Commandments informs us that we should not covet our neighbours. At this rate we will have to start inventing countries that may be able to bail us out or reinvigorate our economy.
    The bar is been set low. Increasing flights to Colombia may bring in extra revenue; however rest assure it will bring in organised crime. You may be surprised that in a report earlier last year in the UK it was reported that Nigerian tourists were the third biggest spenders of all nationalities! Sadly Nigeria is a country so endemically corrupt and fraudulent that it comes as a surprise to most people that its life support machine is still functioning. Perhaps there is a correlation here?
    If we have to run cap in hand to other countries, can we please do some desk research or some secondary research?
    If we as a country are so desperate may I suggest that we start talking to countries like Norway, Sweden and Denmark? These countries function exceptionally well. They have small populations, low crime rates and “small” economies. They do not practise crazy neo-liberal policies. Nor do their governments sell out their people. Their infrastructure is extremely good. They respect their environment and they have a high standard of living.


  44. @ Exclaimer
    …man don’t make sport!!
    NORWAY?
    SWEDEN?
    Denmark.

    Boss, those are PRODUCTIVE countries where people believe in hard work – and where everyone is expected to pull their own weight… Read meritocracy….the very antithesis of brass bowlery.

    Oil and water don’t mix well….it may be best for us to pursue Nigeria and Columbia….


  45. Forget about Sweden ….Barbados is a much closer place to go for a Lap dance


  46. Artexeres ..if the BLP were making “noise” to lay off workers..then why the hypocrisy NOW thatgovt has reyrenched….BTWgoing back as far as 2001 the BLP had the task of laying off workers but more than doing nothing..the BLP pass a Law forbidding workers pay to be cut complicating a problem with dire consequences which could have help to save jobs. People not fools just to look at the half and not the whole

  47. Equal Rights & Justice Avatar
    Equal Rights & Justice

    the QEH is to shed 70 persons,this does not included nurses,


  48. If the Haiti President reads this blog may I suggest that he waits by his phone as I believe that our Prime Minister will be calling him very shortly?


  49. @ ac

    “the BLP pass a Law forbidding workers pay to be cut complicating a problem with dire consequences which could have help to save jobs.”

    Just as I have stated, DLP politicians say something, and their supporters run with it. My friend, if a percentage reduction of public sector salaries was an option available to the DLP, surely they would have brought forward a motion in Parliament to have it debated, {and with the same speed they brought the motion to repeal the Public Accounts Committee laws}, explain its significance to the present economic situation and the consequences if the cut is not undertaken.

    Another thing, it has been advanced by supporters such as you, Maureen Holder, et al, that the opposition is all talk but lacking in the presentation of suggestions. It is ironic that no one in the public, except the DLP and their cohorts, have factual knowledge of Barbados’ economic situation and the effects government policies has made the recession worse. Hence, against such a background, ideal suggestions would be difficult. Through consultations, the IMF would be in a better position to make recommendations. This DLP administration has not listened to the IMF, then to whom will they listen?

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading