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Walter Blackman - Actuary and Social Commentator
Walter Blackman – Actuary and Social Commentator

The following submission is reprinted from May 2014.  Walter’s view: “As an update, the situation has worsened. At the end of March 2015,

the amount of Barbadians who are of working age [โ€ฆ] = 222,400. Of that number, only 127,900 found employment. Therefore, 94,500 Barbadians are unemployed. This means that, today, Barbados has a gross Human Unemployment Rate (HUR) of 42.5%. It was 41% for 2013. The amount of unemployed persons at the end of 2013 stood at 88,000. At March 2015, it is 95,000. At August 2015, it must now be higher because young adults recently left school and there are no jobs available for them!”

Reprinted from May 2014:

Based on official demographic numbers put out by the Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs recently, I have calculated that there were 214,100 Barbadians available for work in 2013. Out of that number, only 126,300 persons were actually employed.

This means that 87,800 Barbadians of working age did not have jobs in 2013. When translated into a concept that measures the wastage of our human resource, this also means that the Human Unemployment Rate (HUR) for Barbados was 41% in 2013.

All Barbadians, on one hand, should justifiably feel a sense of pride in the fact that Barbados has attracted immense global respect for its high ranking based upon the United Nationsโ€™ Human Development Index. On the other hand, however, a Human Unemployment Rate of 41% demonstrates to the world that whilst our governments have provided, and are continuously striving to provide, critical developmental services for our citizens (education, health care, security etc), only about 59% of our workforce is being utilized. Put differently, we are investing millions of dollars in raising and educating our people, but no successful policies are being implemented to enable them to work and make a meaningful contribution to the economic development of their country.

Out of the 3,500 students who finished school in 2013, very few have succeeded in getting jobs. How many school leavers will get jobs in 2014? Fewer still. To give you an idea of how serious our unemployment situation is, imagine that for the past 25 years, not one student leaving school in Barbados has been able to find a job.

Given the destructive, wasteful, and corrupt practices which have seeped into the area of public finance in Barbados over the past 35 years, a Human Unemployment Rate of 41% at this time is almost fatal economic news for our country. The cumulative effect of these practices are now forcing us to stare some serious questions in the face: Can the government of Barbados adequately service a debt burden of $10 billion, repay its $2 billion obligation to the NIS fund, meet its mounting, unfunded civil service pension obligations, and pay for salaries and services with only 59% of a small workforce being employed? Can we, as a country, earn enough foreign exchange to support our 2 to1 peg to the US dollar with a whopping 41% of our workforce remaining idle? Can we achieve these national objectives in the presence of widening fiscal deficits, paltry global exports, and limited borrowing options triggered by governmentโ€™s inability to pay its debts?

If the answer to all of these questions is a resounding โ€œNoโ€, then, given our current human unemployment rate, there is no feasible solution to our public finance and national economic problems. Looking at our situation from a black hole perspective, we are now heading towards the event horizon. A downward spiral has started in earnest, and in many cases, an already bad situation is going to get worse. Let me give you an idea of what I mean.

The fiscal problems confronting the government of Barbados cry out for a solution that involves job creation and attendant expanding government revenues. At the same time, unfortunately, diminishing exports, excessive borrowing, poor planning, and low international credit ratings have combined to create a foreign exchange crisis for Barbados. The foreign exchange crisis, in turn, has become the most urgent and overpowering force in the local economy and it has brought in the IMF, the ultimate lender of last resort, to make financial and economic decisions for us that our leaders were not capable of making. In an attempt to inject some measure of fiscal responsibility into the management of our countryโ€™s public finances, and by extension, to safeguard the interests of our foreign creditors, the IMF has effectively initiated a series of layoffs in Barbados. These layoffs, along with other financial problems confronting the government, have depressed aggregate economic demand, and have directly triggered layoffs in the private sector as well. The Human Unemployment Rate which stood at 41% in 2013 is therefore rising appreciably in 2014. An already bad situation has worsened, and there is no relief in sight.

Given the fact that we have 88,700 able-bodied Barbadians who are not working, what policies and ideas are being highlighted and pursued by the government with the aim of solving the problem?

A few weeks ago, we were treated to a somewhat instinctive proposition which came from the Honourable Mr. Ronald Jones, Minister responsible for Education. Ostensibly inferring that the government does not like the idea of cutting its expenditure, the minister argued that Barbados needs more economic activity which would enable the government to collect more taxes to cover its expenditure. Fair enough, up to that point. However, where the minister started to raise the cynical eyebrows of his detractors is when he recommended, as a solution to the problem, the production of many more babies than are being born currently in Barbados.

The ministerโ€™s recommendation of an increase in baby production in Barbados (whether by fornication, adultery, hook, crook, or traditional marriage) as a solution to our current economic problems, must have sparked some interesting conversation and responses in the offices, rum shops and living rooms across Barbados.

On the religious front, the Church has always held the position that sex and procreation should be reserved for married couples only. Yet so far, the voices within the Church, the traditional bulwark of our societal morality, have remained relatively silent in the face of a deafening cry from a minister of the Crown for engagement in indiscriminate, wanton, baby-producing sex.

On the family planning front, we have been advised for the past 40 years, that it is of extremely critical importance for Barbados, a small island state with scarce limited resources and with one of the highest population densities in the world, to keep a firm lid on the growth of its population. The ministerโ€™s solution represents a shot across the bow of the Barbados Family Planning Associationโ€™s efforts which are aimed at keeping our population from exploding.

In Barbados, health practitioners and AIDS counselors have been highlighting the risks associated with unprotected sex, given the presence of the AIDS virus in many fertile Barbadians. The ministerโ€™s call for an upsurge in unprotected sex, to produce more babies, amounts to an invitation for Barbadians to increase the incidence of AIDS in their country.

On the human unemployment front, therefore, it is fair to conclude that the honourable Minister of Education has more faith in the strategy of waiting for babies to grow up and revive the national economy than in coming up with policies to generate jobs for the 88,700 Barbadians who are currently waiting to be employed. We can only hope that the other members of the cabinet hold a different philosophical position on this matter.

For the unemployed in Barbados today, the future looks rather uncertain and bleak. At the individual level, some of our jobless are hearing daily about the need to become entrepreneurs, but they have little or no experience, no guidance from a successful model in place, no business skills or training, and no finance to transform themselves from being โ€˜dreamersโ€™ into successful entrepreneurs. Others are trying a โ€˜thingโ€™ in the underground economy. Others are sending out hundreds of job applications and are hoping against hope that a few big projects would open up and create some jobs, even if temporarily. After many years of trying, others have given up and have decided to rely on someone else for support.

The future of the entire country depends on our ability to put these 88,700 people to work. Somehow, we have to wrap our collective minds around the central objective of coming up with ideas that can generate jobs for our fellow Barbadians and that rely on no financial contribution or commitment from government.

Can we do it?

Walter Blackman is a pension actuary, licensed by the Federal Government of the USA.

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186 responses to “The Human Unemployment Rate in Barbados – a cause for serious concern”


  1. “We are applying reason and logic in our discussion here, but, at the individual level, how do you handle a young Barbadian, holding a masters degree, never worked before, but puffing up his chest and insisting that his masters degree entitles him to a $10,000 per month salary? How do you pull him aside and tell him that his employer is either providing a service or a product and that there is a process associated with getting that service or product to the consumer, and based on the prices that are paid by the customers, a salary of $10,000 would create a loss for the business?”

    I cannot speak before the sixties but I am sure that our salary levels since then were based on cost of living requirements and not productivity gradually triggering inflationary trends over the years which would in some measure led to our present inability to balance the budget in recent times. In short we have been living above our means for quite some time and overlooking the fact that the since the chickens would eventually have to come home to roost.


  2. โ€œWe are applying reason and logic in our discussion here, but, at the individual level, how do you handle a young Barbadian, holding a masters degree, never worked before, but puffing up his chest and insisting that his masters degree entitles him to a $10,000 per month salary? How do you pull him aside and tell him that his employer is either providing a service or a product and that there is a process associated with getting that service or product to the consumer, and based on the prices that are paid by the customers, a salary of $10,000 would create a loss for the business?โ€
    ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
    That should be the job of the educator to advise the student cautiously that the knoweldge gain while under (his/her) watch along with the necessary certification does not give a higher leverage of assessing a rank and file position with a certainty of ascribing the monetary compensation necessary that they are seeking
    All those crucial and important questions should be dealt within a frame work to direct and lead the student along with explaining the importance that experience plays in getting that high paying and rank and file position which everyone hopes for after years dedicated to studies with accomplishments,
    The job of responsibility if properly allotted can prepare that young impressionable mind for the realities ahead of them ,giving them an additional tool call “preparation”, opening up their minds eye to other possibilities as avenues of choices for them to enter without looking only in one direction setting them on a patch which forces them to look within self first,


  3. At the governmental level, how do you get the opportunity to tell ministers that Barbadians are educated and qualified in almost all areas of human expertise, and thus there is no need for them to be paying millions of dollars to foreign consultants and wasting our foreign exchange? How can you reach them to tell them that government contracts should only be awarded to foreigners after it has been ascertained that no qualified Barbadian could be found to do the job? Barbadian jobs are for Barbadians first! New political thinking is needed.

    every five years at the voting booth for that chance, although not easy ! that being another one of barrows great plans for building a nation with its educated work force that was orchestrated and dismantled by the hands of govts out of disrespect for the man and his vision. therefore what we have left is an engineered scam that have forfeited the peoples right of becoming full owners
    So how can that change happen? looking among our selves and finding a Barrow type mind who can remind and reinforce,


  4. @Walter

    Using your umpire analogy to describe the role of government in a society in a Barbados context, it is fair to conclude its unwillingness to redesign the education system is one easy failure. We continue to spew lawyers and other professions at the expense of citizens trained in the technical vocations. The problem for citizens continue to be how ineffective we are at influencing BOTH political parties when they assume government.

    It is amazing to observe the patience you exercise when dealing with some who over time have demonstrated their DNA is littered with D or B strands, their contributions will always be motivated thusly.

  5. de Ingrunt Word Avatar
    de Ingrunt Word

    David, two quick comments. First up, Walter ‘s “patience…” is wonderful indeed but quite apropos here. This is the first time since I have been on BU that I have seen a series of consecutive comments from AC which as Walter described “are deep, thought provoking …”

    In that mode one can exercise patience. Surely by now you have discovered what caused your cause that is definitely not the regular AC modus.

    And re “we continue to spew lawyers and other professions at the expense of citizens trained in the technical vocations” that definitely seems to be the case to me too. Although, to Walter’s point that ” Barbadians are educated and qualified in almost all areas of human expertise” anecdotally should also be the case.

    Over our (me, Walter) 50+ year lifetimes we have had many scholarship winners every year with the Maths, Science, Science A-level combination (back in that day). And that’s not to mention the other hundreds who excelled below scholarship level in those subjects.

    So there should also be several science based students who have gone on to be top management experts, engineers, actuaries, accountants etc etc .

    But of course it’s much easier to come back home and join the local bar and potter around doing land deals, insurance injury matters and the like. Much easier to hitch your skills to the local politician and await your turn to get one or three of those $770K fee based projects.

    Perhaps the lack of opportunity in the hard science fields has caused the problem you highlighted.

    Thus we have the proverbial chicken and egg situation: can’t have the folks back here if there are no broad based opportunities and we can’t have those opportunities started unless there is a focused plan to develop such.

  6. de Ingrunt Word Avatar
    de Ingrunt Word

    That should have been: ”caused your BREECH.. cause that is definitely not the regular AC modus”


  7. @Dee Word

    The idea behind such a forum like BU is to share honest positions. Therefore your acknowledgement that we have people proffering multiple perspectives from a shared moniker addresses the issue of patience.


  8. Have you ever stopped to think that AC may be suffering from multiple personality disorder? The dominant one is the idiot.


  9. So some still continue to whip up this frenzy of AC,s personalities ,Wow never knew that I was equipped with that kind of a brilliant craftsmanship to fool so many
    It is indeed a craft on a personality level worth pursuing especially when it attracts the minds of intellectual brains
    To be quite honest over the years on BU i simply gave a view respective of my philosophical beliefs pertaining to life with all its twist and turns


  10. What a wonderful picture in the Saturday Sun of August 8, 2015.

    Toni Moore and PM Stuart jamming to Peter Ram’s monster hit ” All O we”

    All O we, are

    Proud Bajans!
    Proud of the people in the blue corner!
    Proud that the go-slow is over!
    Proud that Caswell Franklyn have been left out in the cold!


  11. Switch!

  12. Walter Blackman Avatar

    ac August 8, 2015 at 6:47 AM #
    “another one of barrows great plans for building a nation with its educated work force that was orchestrated and dismantled by the hands of govts out of disrespect for the man and his vision. therefore what we have left is an engineered scam that have forfeited the peoples right of becoming full owners
    So how can that change happen? looking among our selves and finding a Barrow type mind….”

    ac,
    Well said. I agree wholeheartedly.

  13. Walter Blackman Avatar

    Walter Blackman August 8, 2015 at 1:34 AM #
    “How can you reach them to tell them that government contracts should only be awarded to foreigners after it has been ascertained that no qualified Barbadian could be found to do the job?”

    ac August 8, 2015 at 6:47 AM #
    “every five years at the voting booth for that chance, although not easy !”

    ac,
    I remember well, from my political science student days, the opposite positions taken up by two noted social contract theorists: Thomas Hobbes and John Locke.

    Legend has it that Hobbes’ mother transferred her fear, fright, and insecurity brought on by rumours about a planned Spanish armada attack, to her unborn son. Hobbes eventually became famous for postulating that citizens are born with rights, but they give up these rights to their ruler, in exchange for protection and security. To him, chaos and mayhem ought to be avoided at all costs because they had the potential to create a situation in which you would have “no art, no letters, and the life of man solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.”

    John Locke on the other hand, theorized that a ruler’s obligation is to look after the rights and interests of his subjects. To his mind, that is the nature of the social contract between the ruler and the ruled. As soon as the ruler fails to safeguard the rights of his subjects, the social contract has been broken, and his subjects have a justifiable right to remove him.

    Our politicians have embraced the Hobbesian model and have been treating us as they like, knowing that we can do nothing about it until they have decided that their 5 years are up, and the time has come to get a new social contract in the form of an election victory. Admittedly, some Barbadians feel quite comfortable with this approach. It is their right to do so.

    However, if we want to effect meaningful change and force politicians to protect our rights and operate in our interests, then we must adopt the model of John Locke. If our politicians are selling us out, then they must be taught in no uncertain terms, that they” do not have 5 years put down.” We need to get rid of them!

    Cahill is the last straw that must now be used to break our politicians’ backs. Please note that Senator Darcy Boyce never went on a DLP platform to articulate the party’s policies, and has been woefully inept at charting and communicating a comprehensive national energy policy to serve the interests of Barbadians. And yet, you want to tell me, that he has the temerity and audacity, the unmitigated gall to affix his signature on a Cahill contract that is merely a scam to rob Barbadians of a billion dollars? And we must sit down and let him and the others do this to us because 5 years are not up? Hell no! We have seen enough and we have suffered! In honour of John Locke, he and the other political parasites must go. Before February 2016.


  14. @ Walter who wrote,

    “Given the fact that we have 88,700 able-bodied Barbadians who are not working,”

    What do you suggest could be done to employ at least half of them within a year ?

  15. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    pieceuhderockyeahright August 8, 2015 at 2:25 AM #
    @ Mr Blackman

    “Why was the word human put in front of employment?”

    pieceuhderockyeahright,
    I was wondering if I would be able to stimulate any reader’s curiosity by using the adjective “human” to qualify the noun “unemployment”.

    Barbadians have become quite accustomed to hearing that the unemployment rate is 11% or 12%. When they quote and repeat these statistics, they are spewing forth garbage, but they don’t know it.

    By simply referring to the unemployment rate, the growth rate, the inflation rate etc politicians are able to remove the human condition out of the picture, and entice us into cheering and clapping at statistics that do not reflect reality.
    It is really funny when you understand the lengths to which the politicians would go in order to perpetuate these lies.

    Firstly, an individual might be deemed to be employed if they only work a few hours. Politicians routinely find a few days’ or weeks’ work for their lackeys in order to inflate the number of persons working and to bring down the unemployment rate. This trick is particularly effective if it is used at the end of the year.

    Secondly, depending on what rate they want to feed to a gullible public, the politicians give orders that x or y amount of people must be deemed “not interested in looking for work”. The more people they can throw into this category, the lower the unemployment rate they can manufacture.

    Currently, politicians in Barbados are claiming that only 17,000 Barbadians are unemployed. This claim made the whole island laugh recently when one company, Sandals, advertised a few positions. Almost 17,000 Barbadians came out to fight among themselves just for a space in the queue. If sandals had hired all 17,000 people, according to the politicians, unemployment in Barbados would now be zero. What a laugh.

    The approach I used to analyze unemployment avoids most of the “political” tricks. I accept the amount of people they tell me are working and proceed from there, keeping my mind focused on the human condition. So I arrive at a point, using the same data, where I can tell you that around 100,000 human beings are unemployed in Barbados, whilst the politician tells you 12%. My approach makes you think and reflect upon the struggles that households are going through on a daily basis, along with the frustration, and unfulfilled potential.

    Just stop for one moment and imagine 100,000 unemployed persons in a small island like Barbados. To step out of this imaginary world, take a drive through Barbados on a workday and you will see the amount of young boys and girls throughout the island hanging out, smoking and selling weed, playing dominoes and other sports at the village level, gambling, and ready to fight or kill each other to defend the dollar that they have in the gambling “pool”. Ironically, if weed were to stop flowing in Barbados, we would immediately have a “wildcat” riot on our hands.

    My approach is focused on employing human beings, the politician’s approach is focused on employing tricks and gimmicks.


  16. OK. Walter it is your right to expand and espouse your views as the right of passage for change.
    However such ideologies are short term remedies with long term consequences within time burdens and pillaged a society bringing along unrealistic expectations wanting to pull down in short order to build up. Always in a constant state of resentment lokking for perfection
    I espouse the other alternative although might be longer is a model that invokes and revoke having a discipline mode for expression ,giving all a chance to change our minds and become as rebellious as we want to be at the voting booth
    A clean and timely process that is all worth waiting for


  17. To add to Walters’ disgust at Boyce,let us recall OSA referred to him as a Quisling,a traitor.The man was carrying all the BLP plans and strategies to David “I will not lie,cheat nor steal”Thompson,now resting in St John’s churchyard.
    Secondly,as recently as 3 weeks ago while having a photo op pretending to be cleaning up seaweed at Silver Sands,the ugly man(I don’t mean Grynner)Denis’ whey my cut’ Low said the Cahill project will not cost Barbados one cent.All the investment is coming from overseas.Walter,you see the kind ‘o JA we got in a Cabinet ‘o Ministers ’bout hey so?And the man claim he ‘have Phd’ hear?Ya tink it is joke pappy?


  18. @ Walter who wrote,

    โ€œGiven the fact that we have 88,700 able-bodied Barbadians who are not working,โ€

    What do you suggest could be done to employ at least half of them within a year ?

    I expect that some of the 88,700 Barbadians do not want to work.


  19. From the Jamaica Observer.
    http://i.imgur.com/vUpViYn.jpg?2


  20. While the government is looking at sending home “old” people , at least one company is looking at hiring some retrenched and retired old people, albeit temporarily to help them out of a bind that they have found themselves in. The Engineering firm which has been tasked to dismantle Andrews Factory Mill, do not know where to start, as they are not aware of how it was put together,and are asking the old guys who previously worked at Andrews, to come forward and lend their expertise.
    When this old mill came from British Guiana in the late 50’s , it was abandoned in there and was covered in caked in mud as hard as cement. The “uneducated “men , figured out how to put those thousand of pieces of machinery together, while it was still lying all over the factory yard ,being cleaned up.
    Those men used to be called ‘Engineers” but had to relinquish that designation, after the UWI qualified engineers, lobbied for legislation to prevent any reference being made to these men, who over the years are more deserving of the title “Engineer”


  21. “every five years at the voting booth for that chance, although not easy ! that being another one of barrows great plans for building a nation with its educated work force that was orchestrated and dismantled by the hands of govts out of disrespect for the man and his vision. therefore what we have left is an engineered scam that have forfeited the peoples right of becoming full owners

    ac,
    Well said. I agree wholeheartedly.”

    ๏ˆ
    I know Walter to be an intellectual giant whose shoes are hard to fill and I loathe disagreeing with him in intellectual discourse but agreeing with the AC’s comment above wholeheartedly boggles my mind. When dissected AC’s remarks do not complement each other make no sense. For example-‘therefore what we have left is an engineered scam that have forfeited the peoples right of becoming full owners-‘ How does this fit in?

    In addition for AC’S benefit the educated workforce was not orchestrated and dismantled by Govts out of disrespect for Mr Barrow and his vision but by the present DLP Govt.


  22. @ balance
    Agreed…. Walter had the bushman ‘off-balance’ too…
    But on second thoughts, …perhaps it is his way of “not answering a fool according to her own folly….”


  23. balance u need to read and learn with understanding instead of trying to be a professional mix up master

  24. Walter Blackman Avatar
    Walter Blackman

    balance August 9, 2015 at 7:58 PM #
    ac
    โ€œevery five years at the voting booth for that chance, although not easy ! that being another one of barrows great plans for building a nation with its educated work force that was orchestrated and dismantled by the hands of govts out of disrespect for the man and his vision. therefore what we have left is an engineered scam that have forfeited the peoples right of becoming full owners

    Walter,
    “Well said. I agree wholeheartedly.โ€

    balance
    “I know Walter to be an intellectual giant whose shoes are hard to fill and I loathe disagreeing with him in intellectual discourse but agreeing with the ACโ€™s comment above wholeheartedly boggles my mind.”

    balance,
    If you go back and correctly quote what I agreed with wholeheartedly, you cannot possibly come up with a quote starting with “every 5 years…..”
    In fact, ac and I respectfully shared different viewpoints on the 5 years part.

    Here is why I agree with everything ac said except the 5 years part:
    By 1976, Barbados had started to diversify its economy and was boasting of an excellent “education” product. For the most part, the process around which that “education” product was built revolved around the separation of boys and girls at the secondary school level. In came Billy Miller, like a bull in a China shop, and she started dismantling an educational structure that had served the country well, in many areas for many years. Barrow had placed emphasis on hiring teachers who were dedicated and who were interested in teaching children.

    Whereas Barrow placed emphasis on competencies and commitment, Billy Miller placed emphasis on finding political jobs for BLP supporters based on “paper” qualifications. As far as a lot of her new hires were concerned, teaching was simply a means to a pay cheque. The children’s welfare was relegated to secondary or tertiary importance. A similar type of dislocation and changed attitudes (for the worse) took place in the civil service during 1976-1986 and have continued unabated to this very day. Her decision to mix boys with girls at the secondary level has produced nothing but catastrophic consequences for boys.

    Billy Miller fired all of those dedicated teachers who did not have enough paper certificates and hired a set that pleased her. Our “education” product, along with other ancillary activities, have deteriorated since then. She even wanted Barbadian school children to go to school on Saturdays. Most importantly, she introduced discrimination against girls who must now get higher marks than boys to gain entry into the older secondary schools. Did you think she did this out of respect for Barrow and his vision? No. She was motivated by political envy and ignorance. She had to destroy that source from which Barrow was getting so much praise.

    To ac’s credit, she did not level her charges at one particular government. She boldly stated that the dismantling was done “by the hands of governments”. Tom Adams, Erskine Sandiford, Owen Arthur, David Thompson, and now Freundel Stuart, have all chipped away at Barrow’s vision whilst paying lip service to his name.

    Barrow knew them all, and he knew the risks that we Barbadians were exposed to. So much so, that he warned us to be vigilant, and to keep a watchful eye on our “masters” at all times. If we failed to do that, he predicted, we will wake up one morning and realize that we did not own a piece of our country. We have failed to be vigilant, we have rested on our laurels, we have suffered from Billie Miller’s counter-revolution in education, and our leaders have sold us out so much and so often, that ac can now correctly conclude that “what we have left is an engineered scam that have forfeited the peoples right of becoming full owners” of our country.
    That, my friend, is why I still agree with ac wholeheartedly.

  25. Walter Blackman Avatar

    By the way, I need to make a disclaimer.
    I do not know the gender of any person who uses a moniker on BU.
    When making reference to a person, the rules of the English language limit me to either “he” or “she”. Whichever one I pick runs a 50% chance of being incorrect.

  26. are-we-there-yet Avatar
    are-we-there-yet

    Walter Blackman, re. your 9:57 post;

    Wow!!!!!!!!

    You seem to be on a roll today.


  27. @ Walter
    Boss, if you think that AC understands ANY shiite about what you just said ‘in agreement with her’ …you have to be sipping left-over Crop over rum.
    Well said … but what agree with what AC what…??!!

  28. Walter Blackman Avatar

    Bush Tea August 9, 2015 at 11:30 PM #
    @ Walter
    “Boss, if you think that AC understands ANY shiite about what you just said โ€˜in agreement with herโ€™ โ€ฆyou have to be sipping left-over Crop over rum.”

    Bush Tea,
    I am trying to write a response, but my fingers are being cramped up by the memory of those two words that you occasionally throw at David like a Molotov cocktail: gallows bait. LOL.


  29. AC

    I have noticed throughout BU blog these days that your opinion is now starting to assume some sense of validity and acceptance-even though the blog claims to be impartial with respect to a particular political leaning. But as long as your opinion is being heard and not necessarily respected, the blog is in some small measure being truthful to its desired aim and objective. But the censoring of a particular opinion because it affronts a specific worldview undermines the fundamental of all rights; the right to free speech, but within the frontier and confines of constitutional-protection. I definitely support the aim and objective of this blog because it gives Barbadians both foreign and domestic a voice to vent regarding the current issues which affects the island of ours. But where the blog fails in its aim and objective, is when it allows characters the likes of Bush Tea, the unguarded- latitude to malign and recklessly assault the characters of those persons who may defer somewhat to a prevailing opinion; couple with the fact that we yet to be inclusive and tolerant to the voices of the younger generations of Barbadians.


  30. @ Walter
    …see what Bushie was saying now….?

    Looka trouble now….
    Do you recall what is meant by ‘mashing trash…?’

    You gone and pick through AC’s gibberish, discarded heaps of idiocy, change up punctuation, fix-up spelling and manage to put together a single sensible sentence …and now got these morons thinking they are Einstein prodigies…..

    Never give encouragement to a fool, …even in the off chance that he miss and say something sensible….
    Now you have donkeys talking about idiots “starting to assume some sense of validity and acceptance….” LOL ha ha ha …wha’loss!!


  31. Bushie,

    Remember that ac has more than one personality. One of the less stupid ones is rebelling and fighting the idiot for control. Expect little nuggets of reason as the battle unfolds.


  32. Bush Tea

    AC, have been getting a lot more “LIKES” these days for her responses and this would lead any intelligent person to concluded that there is some value in her opinion. And this doesn’t go without saying that truth crushed to the earth shall rise again! Come on Bushie… examine AC recent responses and you will discover that her support on BU is slowly, but steadily growing. It doesn’t take a brain the size of a southern watermelon to arrive at this conclusion; it is evident by AC’s favorable, (favourable) but growing support in recent months.


  33. @ Dompey
    Boss…
    Since that fire that almost took your life (when your neighbour reportedly dragged you crying hysterically from the burning building) Bushie is made to understand that you have now purchased a decent cellphone to replace the one you had plugged in to charge and placed by your pillar. ( You know…. the one you had plugged in at the hospital AFTER pulling the plug on the Heart/Lung machine connected to that unfortunate patient).

    Surely this new cellphone has a spell check?
    Better yet … have you tried turning it off for a week or so…?

    Can’t have you burning another building now can we….?


  34. Oh boy !Unbelievable


  35. Deputy Dawg alias Bush.sh.it is notorious for “one liners”and zingers .People of his ilk make good dictators being that they can massage their own egos and easily draw an unguarded crowd of infidels who are captivated by his ability slime and disregard


  36. LOL @ AC
    “….his ilk make good dictators being that they can massage their own egos and easily draw an unguarded crowd of infidels who are captivated by his ability slime and disregard”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    …you mean like “Hitlah” …or SLIME /Flow..?
    Ya joke… you eva see a dictator with a whacker…?!!
    ha ha LOL …Ohh Sh…… ๐Ÿ™‚


  37. Interesting word being used here “infidels”. To whom or what are we supposed to be faithful – GOD or the DLP?


  38. Seriously bro”your type”does not in any way perturbed or disturb .There are reasons that people of your type exist. To pest! to foister upon! and to imply with a boldness of irrationality .


  39. I agree wholeheartedly with your comments pertaining to Ms Billie Miller. In my view she like Dame Nita benefitted from accolades and in the case of Ms Miller non-descript titles like Senior Minister which would be regarded as underserving when their contribution to the nation is placed under the miscroscope. Her tenure as Minister of Education was divisive and fraught with fluff rather than substance. Let me add though that dedicated teachers were a part of the system long before the introduction of internal self-government in 1956 and has nothing to do with Mr Barrow. What i want to emphasise to AC in her still evident rambling but newly found philosophical moorings is that the expansion of free secondary education in Barbados has been orchestrated and dismantled by the current DLP administration thereby effectively castrating the vision of the great man.


  40. @Balance,

    “…expansion of free secondary education in Barbados has been orchestrated and dismantled by the current DLP administration thereby effectively castrating the vision of the great man.”

    How has it been “dismantled”?


  41. How has it been โ€œdismantledโ€?

    Ask your friend Ac those were her words or better yet Mr Stuart who disturbed Mr Barrow’s slumber in the Elysian fields and was told by Mr Barrow betwen wake and sleep that free secondary was not intended to last forever.

  42. Walter Blackman Avatar

    Bush Tea August 10, 2015 at 6:39 AM #
    “@ Walter
    โ€ฆsee what Bushie was saying nowโ€ฆ.?

    You gone and pick through ACโ€™s gibberish, discarded heaps of idiocy, change up punctuation, fix-up spelling and manage to put together a single sensible sentence โ€ฆand now got these morons thinking they are Einstein prodigiesโ€ฆ..”

    Bush Tea,
    I did all of that?
    A la Shakespeare, will all this evil that I have done live after me?


  43. balance you have callously disregard all of ac other comments which were explicit in pointing out the roots causes of the dismantling of Barrow vision and the negative effects it has on Barbadian workforce and barbados as a “whole”
    Balance ac believes this issue is a little too deep for you as you are adamant by a stymied political view that the dismantling of Barrows vision began six years ago,
    Unfortunately it did not as there is more than enough evedience to show that the people with all their accreditation and education were purposely locked out and not giving a chance to prove their intellectual worthiness in most areas that were instrumental in building a country except to be come a civil workforce force at cost to govt, Do u believe that is what Barrow had envisioned . is it beyond your intellect to expand your mind beyond a six year span and decipher the causes and effects that have triggered and have continued to play a role in dismantling the barrow vision. you might be correct about the education system being caught in the cross fires, however the cost and its impact would not have been so severe if the trust worthiness of the people was given preference and not snatched away and given to outside influence which would have resulted in a people and a country more stable and financially secure and not having to lean or look on the outside,

  44. Walter Blackman Avatar

    Bush Tea August 10, 2015 at 6:39 AM #
    “@ Walter

    Looka trouble nowโ€ฆ.
    Do you recall what is meant by โ€˜mashing trashโ€ฆ?”

    Bush Tea,
    Yes. I recall.
    After the sugar crop had been reaped, and the familiar hunger pangs had come back with a vengeance, we young (back then) children would go through the cane fields walking and searching with desperate, sensitive feet. As soon as our feet felt anything that had mass, we would stop and frantically search through the trash hoping that it was a piece of cane left behind. Regardless of whether the discovered piece of cane had only one, two, or three joints, we didn’t care. Cane had become so scarce at that point, we even ate the “knots”.

    Once in a while, we would come across a joint that had been partially molested and assaulted by a rat. We would routinely suck the part that was still “good”. Remind me to ask Georgie Porgie if that reckless act gave us immunity against leptospirosis.

    Getting back to the topic at hand, and putting your lamentations and groaning into proper context, I now clearly understand why you, with serpentine guile, wanted to direct my memory back to mashing trash. Donna nailed it when she unwittingly suggested that I view these pieces of left over sugar cane as “little nuggets of reason”.

  45. Walter Blackman Avatar

    ac August 10, 2015 at 6:35 PM #

    “Unfortunately it did not as there is more than enough evidence to show that the people with all their accreditation and education were purposely locked out and not giving a chance to prove their intellectual worthiness in most areas that were instrumental in building a country except to be come a civil workforce force at cost to govt, Do u believe that is what Barrow had envisioned?”

    ac,
    Another thought provoking question. Let the reasoning flow!

  46. Walter Blackman Avatar

    balance August 10, 2015 at 11:56 AM #
    “Let me add though that dedicated teachers were a part of the system long before the introduction of internal self-government in 1956 and has nothing to do with Mr Barrow.”

    balance,
    Point taken.


  47. The persons alive today, who were in Mr. Barrow cabinet and must have been party to what was envisioned for Barbados, have to be really numb , and also lost any integrity their had to allowed this Cabinet to destroyed Barbados and don’t say anything, only Sir Lloyd Sandiford, asked how we get back to this stage , he could and should say because he knows , but as I said lacking integrity,


  48. โ€œUnfortunately it did not as there is more than enough evidence to show that the people with all their accreditation and education were purposely locked out and not giving a chance to prove their intellectual worthiness in most areas that were instrumental in building a country except to be come a civil workforce force at cost to govt, Do u believe that is what Barrow had envisioned?โ€

    Purposely locked out from what and by whom? It was Mr Barrow who created the army of occupation by expanding Govt to accommodate the intellectuals who were locked out of the family owned closed shop businesses and ironically the middle class was born out of this Barrow vision. A cost is attached to any thing good.


  49. @ balance
    Barrow’s error was that he thought that he would life forever …and hence did not build a sustainable SYSTEM of governance to ensure the longevity of his vision. he actually thought that by ‘educating’ Bajans, common sense would have come to the fore….
    LOL
    …he did not know AC or Dompey…
    …and Alvin had not yet ‘written any books’ … So Errol thought that ‘education’ would produce common sense… ha ha ha

    So while Lee Kuan Yew built a disciplined meritocratic, GOVERNANCE system, based on PERFORMANCE, …Barrow focused on quickly raising LIVING standards…. then died and left the job to visionless jokers….

    Wonder how things would have gone if Wynter Crawford had been Prime Minister instead… ๐Ÿ™‚


  50. Bush Tea

    You ought to know that there is a polar distinction between education and common-sense, so the idea that Barrow somehow thought that education would have produced common-sense is pure hogwash. I witnessed not too long ago one of the highly educated professionals at my place of employment, backing into on coming traffic. So therefore, Barrow was not as ignorant as you are Bushie, to have thought that education would have in some small measure produced common-sense, when we have highly educated males in our society who don’t even know to put on their shoes in the morning.

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