Submitted by William Skinner
...we will all learn that seeing big tourist liners and tourists walking about Broad Street is not the answer to our problems...
…we will all learn that seeing big tourist liners and tourists walking about Broad Street is not the answer to our problems…

“Hotels are now doing tours and transfers with their own taxis, and this should not be so. They should use the taxis in their yards to do such tours on a rotation basis and not give the work to these big companies. These kinds of practices should be stopped. Oh how I yearn for Errol Barrow. How do you expect the local people to survive when all the sweets are given to others? Carl Pinder, Nation Newspaper, 2/21/14: Port Taxi men Sucking Salt

While we immerse ourselves in the tantrums and idiocy of both the Barbados Labour Party and the Democratic Labour Party, there is a growing movement among the poor, and downtrodden that is revealing itself. Those who believe that our nation is only sinking from an economic crisis and essentially uninspiring leadership, across the political divide, are sadly mistaken. We are in the midst of a potentially dangerous social revolt that will have repercussions for at least fifty years, unless we abandon petty party politics and pay attention to those citizens, who have been economically and socially marginalized by both the BLP and DLP.

Nowhere in the economic management of our country, has the poor black business person been more systematically marginalized, than is evident in the multi- billion dollar tourism industry. The industry was hijacked by a ruthless bunch of foreign investors aided and abetted by lazy, almost parasitical local corporate leaders. They refused to invest in the country that has propped up them and their wealth for over three hundred years.

In bed with those local corporate mercenaries, is the so –called political managerial class that used the industry as a nice cushion for party lackeys, on both sides, who got jobs but could never effectively promote the tourism product overseas.

The concerns of the writer quoted above are nothing new. It is a known fact that our taxi men and women, over the years, have been forced to park their cars overnight by the port, in order to get one job the following morning.

While the tourism ministers bragged about tourist arrivals, they never developed any economic safety net, for the small business persons who had invested in the trade. Some will argue that tax breaks were given to those who wanted to purchase vehicles for this purpose but even with the incentives, they were not guaranteed a single penny because the big tour operators were always reaping the true benefits. In other words : What is the sense of giving a man/woman a pretty fishing boat , when you know that the fishing banks designated are already depleted or controlled by others?

The same hoteliers in cahoots with the black political managers, did all in their power to chase the vendors off the beach because they were making a very comfortable livelihood and this was very offensive, to those hoteliers whose properties, had boutiques and similar establishments selling the jewellery and other articles, that small black entrepreneurs were selling on the beaches. In other words, they wanted the whole hog! In the mean time, the hoteliers were ripping off the tourists with exorbitant prices for meals and other related products and were not supporting the small farmers to any great extent. The hoteliers succeeded in pricing themselves out of the market and then turned around and blamed the same political managers; the beach vendors; the workers and everybody but their pitiful and pathetic selves for their now exposed inability to improve industry performance.

Mr. Pinder and his colleagues will not get any assistance from the politicians or the major players in the industry because what is happening to them is a well orchestrated plan that has been working against small business people like him for the past forty years. As I posited earlier, the economic malaise with which we are presently dealing is only the tip of the iceberg. The truth is that we have elected to destroy small manufacturers; small farmers; taxi men/women; beach vendors; small fisher folk; entertainers; small hired car operators, small restaurateurs and virtually all the small mainly black players in the industry, in order to satisfy foreigners and the local power players.

Those who are now scampering to beseech the IMF and distant lands to bring us out of this self imposed odyssey of mal governance and ad hoc nation planning are missing the point. Within our walls, the question of economic enfranchisement for the majority of our people must be on the agenda of those seeking real change. To overcome British/European colonialism and almost two hundred years later, to go cap in hand begging another ethnic group to be our saviors is nothing more than pure stupidity. It is grounded in nothing more than an unbelievable disrespect for our struggle to date.

Like Mr. Carl Pinder, we will all learn that seeing big tourist liners and tourists walking about Broad Street is not the answer to our problems. Perhaps if the collective economic planners of both the decadent Barbados Labour Party and the equally decadent Democratic Labour Party, had spent less time chasing their black brothers and sisters off the beaches and more time ensuring that these creative business people were indeed given a bigger piece of the tourism pie, the industry would have had more significance for the average Barbadian. They chose to destroy the Pinders of Barbados and turned a blind eye to their own short comings. As the Mighty Gabby once said: “One day coming soon………………”

171 responses to “Marginalizing Ordinary Black Barbadians is DANGEROUS”


  1. WOW u have spoken a mouthful hard to disagree,,,,,,,,,,,but we have no one to blame but ourselves,,,,over the years people have chosen to vote their interest away in favor of other peoples interest and the sad part it is never going to change,,


  2. In the tumult of today’s politics you Sir based on this piece can be deemed a prophet. I do declare that we just read the gospel according to William Skinner. On point I dare say!


  3. Let’s all wait for the Jack ass response from consultant Mark Fenty.Ya know it coming.


  4. Well not one, ,about three or four in succession. Dat man does think in pieces.


  5. but true in all of this turmoil the owners of the land are forgotten,,,are u kidding what owners ..what land,,,,,,,,,,,how did bajans get so foolish to give away their birth rite to foreigners ,now let me see,, they brought gits of gold frankincense and myrrh ;…..they said theres was worth more than what we owned ,,,,,,,so we bite the bait and the rest is history and we have not learned,,,,,,,did u say the bus privatization was down the street……me gone got to catch that bus,,,i hate the rain…………beep beep,,, wait bozie is dat onions and miller sitting back there…..sorry me getting off,,,,,bye …..


  6. Excellent article by Mr. skinner…but what did we expect when we keep putting our assets into foreign hands – either through ownership or through management?
    Why the hell would some foreigner running a big hotel care about some taxi driver down by the gate…except very likely seeing him as an eyesore…?

    When Miller gets his way and sell off the airport and sea port and every shiite else of value, what the hell wunna think the new owners will do…?
    ………MAXIMIZE PROFITS for their holding companies back home….just like the old Plantation owners did back in the 1800s….and to hell with the small people…

    Errol Barrow’s thrust for education was actually meant to produce a class of leaders and managers who could develop the island’s resources to the benefit of ALL Bajans… That idea has been hijacked by mindless morons in “education” …who are instead producing crop after crop of brass bowls – only looking to live like American TV characters, while not producing one shiite, and while being INCAPABLE of managing even those national assets that had been acquired by our plantation working grandparents on their pittances….

    €#%{|<%!!

    When we were supporting Owen’s selling our birthrights in pursuit of first world status….we were in fact selling outer selves back into slavery….but this time, rather than white people putting us in chains vi et armis, WE HAVE CHOSEN to sell our asses back into slavery for trinkets tossed out in the name of first world status…

    As Mr skinner has outlined, the chickens are coming home to roost…


  7. OH SHIITE!!!

    Just as Bushie typed that post …..who comes on the CBC TV talking a massive roll of shite with the fat woman- One Sir Hilary…..the single biggest traitor to the education cause of Barbados.

    Here is a man who hijacks Barrow’s dream of producing leaders and managers of world class ….and comes up with a massively expensive exercise in mediocrity – where EVERYONE is targeted for graduate STATUS, while NO ONE reaches any meaningful level of competence to actually MAKE A DIFFERENCE for Barbados and poor Bajans….

    HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF. DOLLARS…for shiite…..while we import managers, foreign business owners, and even mid and low level skilled labour,…… while HIS graduates are mostly clerks lawyers, economists (what ever the hell those are…) and liners on the damn block…..

    In any enlightened society, his ass would be stoned….


  8. While the author makes some very valid points he MADE one MASSIVE ERROR, the Entrepreneurs on the beach were a MAJOR PAIN in the Tourists Neck, Posterior among other parts and HAD to be STOPPED from harassing the tourists!

    This was the feedback I used to get from Canadians when I discussed travelling to Bim.

  9. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2014 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2014 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad

    ac | February 23, 2014 at 6:56 PM | @ Its you that will never change , So you nice and happy with your self and thinking, The sad part is there are many more like you in BIM , Slave to PARTY and back yard thinking.


  10. The Finance Minister reveals COW Williams put $100 million in his pocket from government contracts in the past six years. Not bad for a man who likes to tell us his first job was to pick rocks from mud. Sir COW believes he talks to morons. Thanks for the reinforcement of what we knew Minister Sinckler . Rough and ready COW abetted by a media who never questions the cow shoite he spews is a bigger beneficiary of government funds than all the social programs for the poor and vulnerable in society. COW lives the lifestyle of a billionaire from polo to fast cars, yachts and everything in between. The police have never fingered him as a thief so where are the mega bucks for him to splurge, buy large tracts of land and boast about coming from. We know he moves the earth to please what he doesn’t say is he gets rewarded handsomely by the taxpayers to do so. He and sibling Ralph the other recipient of millions from government are always bitching. We know COW’s style well. The lackeys alone are fooled. What COW what.


  11. “Errol Barrow’s thrust for education was actually meant to produce a class of leaders and managers who could develop the island’s resources to the benefit of ALL Bajans…”

    Did he tell you this personally and would this apply to white Bajans who were soundly cussed by Mr Barrow as leeches and colonialists in his fire and brimstone speeches during his quest for power in 1961? Never once did I hear Mr Barrow in any of his many speeches spell out any vision for education. Matter of fact, according to his former Deputy Prime Minister, Mr Wynter Crawford, the much touted ‘Free education for all” mantra attributed to Mr Barrow was not his brainchild.


  12. “When we were supporting Owen’s selling our birthrights in pursuit of first world status….we were in fact selling outer selves back into slavery….but this time, rather than white people putting us in chains vi et armis, WE HAVE CHOSEN to sell our asses back into slavery for trinkets tossed out in the name of first world status”…
    I might very well be off balanced from time to time but your swiping suggests that you might just be losing it and is in need of a rest.


  13. “In any enlightened society, his ass would be stoned…”
    I have never been a fan of Sir Hilary because I felt that he was all about promoting himself and moreso since his off balanced reasons for sending his children to a school catering for ‘whites’ but I believe that he has been the most progressive principal in charge of the cave hill campus.

  14. Adrian Loveridge Avatar

    Some interesting points which I could argue, but I feel that I might be fighting a losing battle. Two things to consider: Q. Who is the largest hotel operator on Barbados A. Government (the taxpayer).
    Sandals Barbados were granted unilateral extraordinarty concessions including duty-free vehicles. Q. Who granted them? A. Government.
    You cannot blame the hoteliers for that.
    Sandals though, in fairness do allow small vendors on their premises.

    This Government was elected (for better or worse) by eligible electorate which presumably includes small business people of all types.


  15. @balance

    I might very well be off balanced from time to time but your swiping suggests that you might just be losing it and is in need of a rest.

    You need to be more discerning, there is something called economic slavery.


  16. @balance

    Matter of fact, according to his former Deputy Prime Minister, Mr Wynter Crawford, the much touted ‘Free education for all” mantra attributed to Mr Barrow was not his brainchild.

    Does it matter whose idea it was or more importantly it was Barrow who executed or “democratise the educational process”?


  17. @ David
    ‘Democratising education’ was certainly not meant as a pun, but the entire DLP government have been beneficiaries of the Barrow policy. Did we have ‘democratic’ education before 1963, when the policy came in, or even 1961, when the first DLP govt came to power?
    If what we have now is a result of that policy then it has failed. We are more badly governed than at any time in our post-war history.


  18. @ Hamilton Hill

    Now come on Sir. No matter how much I excoriate your politics. I would never impede,curtail or constraint your democratic right to express your opinion regardless of its unintelligibility. So you need not concern yourself with what I am about to add to the discussion here. Your focused effort should be on those persons you have accused of undermining the Barbadian way of life and not Mr. Fenty. Now, leave alone and remember to take your early morning dose of Lithium, to cure your obvious pyschosis before your endeavor to besmear the good intentions of a concern Barbadian.


  19. @ balance
    LOL
    you need to sleep at night.
    ….and yes, Dipper told Bushie just that…

  20. are-we-there-yet? Avatar
    are-we-there-yet?

    Bush Tea; re. your 6.43 am post.

    Gotcha!


  21. Balance

    I wonder what it means for Beckles to have been a “progressive” principal. I can think of the following:

    destroying academic standards

    creating unemployment

    bankrupting the institution

    overloading in law and social science faculties

    putting buildings before people

    creating false hope

    selling UWI’s birthright for a mess of potage

    (Note I don’t mention the fine qualities you mention or any of his other personal qualities).

    So, yes, I do believe he’s head and shoulders above everyone else.

  22. PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2014 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad Avatar
    PLANTATION DEEDS FROM 1926 TO 2014 , MASSIVE FRAUD ,LAND TAX BILLS AND NO DEEDS OF BARBADOS, BLPand DLP=Massive Fruad

    Ruffin | February 24, 2014 at 3:33 AM |

    The Finance Minister reveals COW Williams put $100 million in his pocket from government contracts in the past six years@
    Now that is what we talking about ,We at PLANTATION DEEDS KNOW HOW HE GOT WHERE HE DID SO FAST.
    Sir Henry Forde, MIA /Owen , then came FUMBLE as AG and Crookwait and Mark Cummins talking he eying open LOTS,
    Dam crooks and none can say they dont know who the owners are . 90% of the time its Land that Violet Beckles have deeds to , These crooks line their Pockets with funds and land set said for the Bajans By Beatrice E. Henry at Bajan Prices,
    Here come UDC and NHC to launder the land for self ,
    When We get the land records in the right History we will be living in the Sun again , COW what? Police will not charge him for he a Sir,
    Allen Stanford and Madoffs of this World soon will run out of time ,,,
    If the DLP did not win when PM David was alive , COW still be milking the tax payers with super over runs and delays.
    The AGs of Barbados of Barbados are the biggest crooks on Earth , To use the word CROWN to take what they never earned nor paid for.
    CROOKS , LIARS AND SCUMBAGS.


  23. I do not know what makes Barbados so special that it should escape what is happening everywhere. In my town we are cutting jobs ,rolling back benefits ,freezing salaries, land and businesses are being bought out by new people all the time yours is not an isolated case. Now you know I am not one for letting the truth get in the way of a good story but, can someone please explain the first paragraph to me
    What ” Hotels are doing own tours and transfers” I would think that would be very expensive for most, and unless they had many cars and drivers people would be sitting around waiting.
    As a tourist my biggest complaint of Barbados is that the taxis are not metered and every time I want to go somewhere the price changes, I always took taxis , hated driving on the other side of the road but found I hated the feeling being ripped off even more so now I rent. Taxi drivers cant have it both ways no oversight but want all the work .Unlike maybe Sandy lane where a limo may be expected, most hotels need taxi drivers so if they are getting their own they are reacting to complaints from their customers considering the cost of everything how can this be a money maker.


  24. Why in barbados everyone must always share blame and never look at the real problems. The Taxis have to look at themselves – go and see how they behave in the port & town – it is like a circus – and you know what – clients (both cruise ships staff / port staff and people in need of service look on in amazement when they (the taxi drivers) get on. Then they also try to overcharge everyone and think they can take all on a ride and offering no value. That is why the big cruise ships have had to organise different options for people who want to simply go to a beach (that the taxis don’t want to do either) – the need arose by the bad service / lack of organisation / no constancy in product (different drivers offer different levels of service from 5 star to 0 star) & overpricing being dealt out. Cruise companies cannot sell that and don’t want their customers to experience that. Time for the taxis to re-look their model – that is what every other business has had to do. Nothing is served up on a silver platter any longer. You have to make a mark for yourself & work hard – and there are a lot of single taxi operators out there doing just that too. I guess it is easy for the bottom feeders to make noise as the successful ones are out there doing their thing and getting through.


  25. Meter taxis. I take a taxi from the airport and sometimes on return and every time there is a different charge.


  26. @Balance
    Matter of fact, according to his former Deputy Prime Minister, Mr Wynter Crawford, the much touted ‘Free education for all” mantra attributed to Mr Barrow was not his brainchild.
    +++++++++++
    Your taking shots at EWB is becoming tiresome, he was not perfect by any means but swiping at him does not diminish his accomplishments nor conversely raise the stature of those whom you prefer. If “free education” was not his brainchild his Gov’t didn’t let the grass grow under its feet before implementing what was a pivotal decision in Barbados’ history to transform the lives of thousands of Bajans and their descendants forever.

    The value of that “free education’ is incalculable and Bajans in or outside of Barbados and their offspring are forever grateful that EWB was the leader at that time, your constant harping of his legacy will not sway us one iota.


  27. @Hal Austin
    Did we have ‘democratic’ education before 1963, when the policy came in, or even 1961, when the first DLP govt came to power?
    ++++++++++++
    This has been discussed before, but what was “democratic” if you “passed” for a school and then was interviewed to determine your acceptability? Where answers e.g. ‘my mother is a maid” or my father is a canecutter” would place you further down the totem pole or on the outside looking in whereas the sons and daughters of the “worthy” didn’t even have to sit an exam.

    Some of us had peers at school and we wondered how did they get in here? Later you would discover that their father was “X” or their uncle was “Y” and had some connection that made their entry possible.

    Talk to some old timers while they are still around, you may become better educated.


  28. Have a group of taxi drivers got together to offer their services at a competitive price to hotels? Do you think that hotels want the hassle of running their own fleet of buses when their core business is hotels not transport? It’s called “outsourcing”, and the business is there for the taking if someone comes with a competitive bid, I’m sure. Maybe it’s easier to sit on your backside in the cab waiting for a fare and then complain when it doesn’t come.


  29. @ Sargeant

    I am an old timer. I was around before education became ‘free’. The reality is that the sons and daughters of the rich and well connected still go to Harrison College and Queens College and get the Barbados scholarships – unless they are from certain ethnic groups.
    Who were the people who got the First and Second Grade scholarships?
    A better distribution of opportunities is fine, but plse do not exaggerate it.
    My old school, St Giles, had plaques around the wall of the hall with the names of scholarship winners. That was very inspiring to me, with a head like JO Morris.
    I moved on and had such mentors as Harry Sealy, Karl Broodhagen, Frank Collymore and others in my new place.

  30. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Sargeant | February 24, 2014 at 9:10 AM |
    “Some of us had peers at school and we wondered how did they get in here? Later you would discover that their father was “X” or their uncle was “Y” and had some connection that made their entry possible.”

    That is definitely true of old apartheid “Bubados”.
    But balance is right in stating the policy of expanding free secondary education to include the traditional grammar schools from 1962 was indeed the brainchild of Wynter Crawford based on the parent model started under the G.H Adam’s administration.
    A
    lthough EWB might not have conceived the policy of universal ‘free’ Secondary education his sponsorship and execution of the programme ( along with the free school meals) under his premiership was the blood that gave life to the real “democratization” of secondary and subsequent tertiary education in Bim.
    For that and that alone he is entitled to the adulation of ‘old timers who will always shower praises on his memory and keep alive his administration’s legacy.


  31. Does it matter whose idea it was or more importantly it was Barrow who executed or “democratise the educational process”?

    yes it does so that historical data can be accurate in the interest of truth and enlightenment


  32. lthough EWB might not have conceived the policy of universal ‘free’ Secondary education his sponsorship and execution of the programme ( along with the free school meals) under his premiership was the blood that gave life to the real “democratization” of secondary and subsequent tertiary education in Bim.”

    I have absolutely no problem with that point of view Mr Miller because credit must be given where credit is due.
    For that and that alone he is entitled to the adulation of ‘old timers who will always shower praises on his memory and keep alive his administration’s legacy.


  33. I am not surprised that emphasis would be placed on all that is wrong with the taxi men/women and not on the broader question of why the multi-.billion dollar tourism industry has been engineered to wipe out small black business persons. My position is that there is always room for improvement but in many instances the hustling and bustling , is a direct result of improper planning by the higher ups. I guess we can blame the maids and gardeners for a half of flying fish in hotels costing upwards of $US6 ! Or we can blame the bell hops for the poor marketing skills of the BHTA.


  34. @Hal Austin
    The reality is that the sons and daughters of the rich and well connected still go to Harrison College and Queens College and get the Barbados scholarships – unless they are from certain ethnic groups.
    +++++++++++++++
    ) What we have seen in the past couple of decades is the rise of “specialty schools” where the emphasis is on preparing the children for the “‘eleven plus” and of course the “well connected’ can afford to send their children to those schools. Other Bajans of less modest means send their children for “private lessons’ where they are prepared by the same teachers who teach them in their regular class (Confession I had private lessons but they were given another teacher who had no connection to my primary school).It stands to reason that these children will still go the HC’s and QC’s today.

    2) Are you suggesting that the recipients of B’dos Scholarships are not deserving of same? Some of them regardless of their background seem to burn the midnight oil so hard work has its benefits. If the Gov’t implements the policy of payment for University education we may see a shift in the social makeup of those who obtain Barbados scholarships because those who “coast’ knowing that their ride to UWI is taken care of may wake up and smell the coffee.

    3) The old timers I am speaking about are not household names but are members of your community who became the masons, carpenters, joiners plumbers etc. or who immigrated to England to better their lives.


  35. Far from it Mr Sargeant Mr Barrow’s legacy of transforming Barbados from village status to Developed status including his expansion of universal education cannot be denied but he has been credited with things which were not of his making and history should be a record of fact not fiction.whether or not it is palatable to you.


  36. @ Sargeant
    I am saying that our educational system has failed. What do they teach in the special schools that cannot be taught in the public schools? Ordinary schools should be able to produce good results.
    In terms of the eleven plus is the first social divide in our educational system, one that stays with most people for the rest of their lives.
    As to Barbados Scholarships, what I am saying is that most of those people who get them should not have their higher education paid for by the taxpayer.
    A Barbados Scholarship should be offered to someone who is studying a subject of relevance to the development of the nation. It should be given on condition that the person returns to Barbados to work in come capacity for a minimum of three years or repay the value of the scholarship in full.
    We have been giving Barbados/Island scholarships since the 1920s, has there ever been an audit of who gets these scholarships, what subjects they studied, where they studied, and what they did after graduation?
    It is money given away without any trace of where it goes. And, reading the Nation, it seems only the sons and daughters of the well connected seem to get them.
    Let us find out what value we get from them. By the way, this is not sour grapes.


  37. WS everyone has to take some responsibility, and you are so off the mark, people travel to experience other cultures not to sit in the same cookie cutter marriot they have back home. They want to go to a rum shop, lime with the people, buy something home made not coming in a crate from china, made to feel special . They want to see Barbados through the eyes of a local, but you (not personally) have forgotten what it is all about. Tourists are seen as some kind of cow, to be milked at every opportunity, but must accept this is the way it is without complaint, and it isn’t just the hoteliers doing the milking
    I remember saying what happened to the music, I loved the sounds that used to be everywhere that seems to only be heard at cropover or special venues My father-inlaw told me we don’t like that all the time WHAT????? Who cares what you like its the tourist experience that is important I was at oistins on a Friday great music being played a lot of tourists tried to dance on stage and were shooed off why??? who the phuck knows. just sit there and enjoy yourself but don’t try and have fun.
    I remember walking down the street and everyone saying hello, but it seems somehow pleasantries are a thing of the past, it doesn’t cost anything to be friendly tourists paid a lot of money to come to your shores, Your right something is wrong somewhere but one thing for sure it is not the tourists fault.


  38. “Hotels are now doing tours and transfers with their own taxis, and this should not be so. They should use the taxis in their yards to do such tours on a rotation basis and not give the work to these big companies. These kinds of practices should be stopped. Oh how I yearn for Errol Barrow. How do you expect the local people to survive when all the sweets are given to others? Carl Pinder, Nation Newspaper, 2/21/14: Port Taxi men Sucking Salt
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    I agree the small man needs to be given a chance to make a living.

    But, suppose the big man is also being forced to his knees by the economic conditions as is also, always the case.

    He has far more to lose than the small man.

    Why should he not be able to respond to the situation?

    The truth is neither one will see the other’s point of view because all they can see is their own.

    Yet, they both need one another.

    Both are selfish.

    The two won’t sit down and figure out ways to make the pie bigger.

    Each wants to make his slice of a shrinking pie bigger.

    This is where the destabilization occurs because it is impossible without serious strife.

    Barbados was not always like that.

    People worked together to improve things for all.

    It is the selfishness that is destroying and will ultimately destroy the Barbados we once knew and loved.

    A sad fact of life …. but a fact nonetheless.

    …… one other thing …… education is being confused with schooling.

    Think of all the major Barbados businesses that thrived in the days when there was limited access to schooling and no UWI and free tertiary education.

    UWI has produced not a single BS&T, or Plantations Ltd. or a Cotton Factory or a Barbados Foundry ….. zip … just a lot of people who can’t find jobs to match their so called education.

    All those old businesses are gone …. foreigners we say!!

    …. and yet BS&T and Plantations Ltd. both show us that when we work together we can build ……. neither one was based on a single small man but were formed out of a pooling of resources and a willingness to work together.

    … but ……that was when education used to be more important than schooling.

    I think the solution is more easily soluble than one can imagine, …..

    … just a few old die hard, 60’s programmed racists among us to die off and it will turn around.

    Who knows, maybe they will figure it out and change so they can see the situation change.


  39. Gents,
    We should not be arguing about who recommended the needed 1950s-60s reforms BUT PRAYING for the Reincarnation of the Dipper, Cammie, Grantley, Tom et al to ACT decisively today to straighten Bim out!

    HAL, I am not quite sure what you are saying about today BUT the fact is that ethnicity is not a significant factor in attending the top schools now or being in a position to attain a Bdos Scholarship. However, it may well be true that the powerful darker people ensure their kids have an advantage by whatever means necessary.

    When I attended HC in the 1970s many of my darker pals came from St Giles and Wesley Hall. I remember conducting a very rough analysis in 5th Form and Lower Science 6th and can say that the White proportion went from 25% to 40% between 5th and 6th Form and that was decided by Cambridge Uni exams and marking. There was no race question asked or collected on the Cambridge Reg Forms or Exam Papers. There are many, complex reasons for this result of course and I am not attempting to suggest any racial angle except to show that it was not broadly unfair that the Whites as a group should have been in such a high proportion.

    There were loads of Whites that wasted their opportunity at HC to be sure but that was also very true of the darker brothers too. The post colonial schooling did under go many teething problems and remember that 1971 yielded 1 Bdos Schol only! ( Brilliant Dark Bro). There were rumours back then that some boys received entry by suspicious means BUT there was quite a spectrum in doubt.


  40. @Ruffin
    HAS COW been PAID?

    Doing the WUK is one thing $ Millions OWING for years is another! When you have paid your workers more than a year ago guess who gets hurt in the pocket???


  41. Sinckler was being disingenuous. Government still owes COW and Barrack. Government is bankrupt.


  42. I have run out of steam. With each passing day the news coming out of Barbados has sent me into a tail wind of utter depression. I do not believe that Barbados is capable of digging itself out the abyss.

    I am only interested in the plight of those Barbadians of African descent whose descendants had to endure hell in order to build Barbados. If Afro-Bajans have little or no knowledge of their history or are indifferent to their history than they stand to lose everything. How may we mitigate this?

    The education system has to acknowledge that Barbados was developed on slave labour. This should underpin our whole education system, and our social and political system. For example – why where plantations built? Who ran the plantations? How where they ran? What was grown on the plantations? How many slaves worked on the plantations? What was the average age of a slave? How where their treated? Why were the plantation owners so brutal? What happened to these slaves after emancipation? What happened to the plantation owners after slavery? Are the families of the plantation owners still the dominate players In Barbados? What is the current plight of those descendants of slaves?

    We have to re-educate the mindset of all Afro-Bajans in order for our people (not the so-called politicians, economists and intellectuals) to assert themselves as the moral, legal, political, social, and the economic guardians of this island called Barbados. Sadly, I fear that we as a people lack this desire.


  43. MoneyBrain | February 24, 2014 at 10:51 AM |

    Gents,
    We should not be arguing about who recommended the needed 1950s-60s reforms BUT PRAYING for the Reincarnation of the Dipper, Cammie, Grantley, Tom et al to ACT decisively today to straighten Bim out!
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    To my way of thinking, these guys are the source problem!!

    They took a working economy and mashed it up.

    I’ll agree under them the pie also got bigger but its the other aspect of Barbados they created that made it all for nothing.

    I wouldn’t wish any one of them on my worst enemy!!

    They brought a sickness to Barbadians’ way of thinking that ensured any gains they may have helped produce were in the long run, losses.

    Guess that is how life is, every silver lining has a cloud attached …. and some silver linings have really big clouds!!

    Funny how clouds can be both black and white but both obscure the sun.


  44. Exclaimer

    For example – why where plantations built? Who ran the plantations? How where they ran? What was grown on the plantations? How many slaves worked on the plantations? What was the average age of a slave? How where their treated? Why were the plantation owners so brutal? What happened to these slaves after emancipation? What happened to the plantation owners after slavery? Are the families of the plantation owners still the dominate players In Barbados? What is the current plight of those descendants of slaves?
    ++++++++++++++++++

    My answer will amaze you and only send you into deeper depression.

    The “plantations” were of varying sizes from a couple of acres to a couple of hundred.

    Most of the early plantations were owned by Quakers.

    Most slaves were treated very well indeed.

    The numbers of slaves on a “plantation” varied from a couple to around a couple of hundred.

    Their ages varied from a couple of minutes to as much as a hundred years.

    The plantation owners were not at all brutal, it would have been counterproductive.

    You will find the families of slaves and plantation owners as dominant players in Barbados right through its history!!

    Many “plantations” were run by descendants of slaves both before and after slavery.

    One of my slave ancestors was running a “plantation” of a couple of acres from as long ago as 1721 ….. and I think he owned a couple of slaves.

    Did you know that the DaCosta family of the Big Six can trace its roots back to the powerful Haynes family as well as slaves?

    The current plight of the descendants of slaves ….. materially much better off …. but more miserable than ever ….. same goes for the descendants of the other set!!

    Everybody is now equally miserable.

    Equality now reigns in Barbados.


  45. @John
    I would like you to explain your position somewhat more fully.


  46. On what?

    I answered a whole slew of questions.


  47. so of wunna so rude the article about the hoteliers bamboozing the taxi drivers and others and putting them out of work and wunna up in here talking bout third rate schools


  48. @John
    More detail on why you hold Dippa et al culpable.

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