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solutions_barbadosGrenville Phillips II is the founder of Barbadosโ€™ newest political party Solutions Barbados. BU asked Grenville to give Barbadians an update on the building of the political party. The following is what he had to share:

Approximately once every 5 years, Barbadians select persons to manage their national affairs. At the time of our independence, we received a debt-free island with well-maintained pubic infrastructure. Fifty years later, our public services are generally poorly managed, and we are risking losing our country as a result of our unsustainable national debt. During periods in Barbados when money appeared to be plentiful, we mistakenly thought that our national economy was being properly managed. However, it takes no special competence to uneconomically spend borrowed money.

It normally takes approximately 10,000 hours of practice for persons to operate at an expert level. Therefore, it would seem that successfully managing a business, with about 10 employees for about 10 years, should adequately prepare an individual to manage our national affairs. To my knowledge, none of Barbadosโ€™ ministers of Government have ever come close to this minimum standard of preparation.

I do not blame any past or current member of Barbadosโ€™ parliament for the current state of our national affairs. Rather, they deserve our deep gratitude. When we had to elect persons to manage the national economy, they were the ones who stepped forward. At the end of each election cycle, they graciously demitted office and admirably accepted the will of the electorate.

If anyone is to blame for the abysmal state of Barbadosโ€™ national affairs, it is those who were adequately prepared for national service, but refused to step forward. Thus, they deprived Barbados of their skills and left the electorate to choose from among a group of unprepared, but willing candidates.

Barbados is fortunate to have had exemplary employers who have effectively trained and cared for their employees as they managed successful businesses. They willingly chose less corporate profits in order to maintain their employees during economically challenging times, and rewarded them for their productivity during times of plenty.

Those employers were adequately prepared to manage Barbadosโ€™ economy. However, rather than fulfilling their national duty, they generally ignored the call. They ought to be utterly ashamed of themselves, and are ultimately responsible for forcing Barbadians to select people who were simply not prepared to manage national affairs.

There is no shame if the electorate chooses others to lead. That is the governance system within which we operate, and the same voters, and their children, have to live with the consequences of their choices. However, to provide them with fair choices, it is the responsibility of the most demonstrably competent and caring employers to offer themselves as candidates in each general election. How else can a small independent country with few natural resources be properly managed?

Our politics has now degenerated into career politicians desperately trying to convince Barbadians that all is well while we are being drowned in debt, taxes and downgrades. It is long-past time to relieve our career politicians from this burden, but thank them for their efforts. I am publically calling all employers with the requisite preparation to review the solutions at SolutionsBarbados.com, and then contact us with the intention of being candidates in the next general elections.

Grenville Phillips II is the founder of Barbadosโ€™ newest political Party, Solutions Barbados, and can be contacted by: Web: SolutionsBarbados.comย  E-mail: NextParty246@gmail.com.ย  Tel: 232-9783

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107 responses to “Solutions Barbados – A Political Party in the Making”

  1. Violet C Beckles Avatar
    Violet C Beckles

    He still dont have a Clue , Its shows he is just looking to replace old crooks with new ones. The Next , cant even come up with his own words, Maybe he needs to google.


  2. “….10,000 hours of practice…..” “Therefore it would seem that successfully managing a business with 10 emps for 10 yrs should adequately prepare an individual to manage our national affairs.” Some self-promotion tantamount to foolishness.

    Don’t blame the present nor former parliamentarian rather be grateful that they screwed up the affairs of the nation. Such folly is “beyond the pale.” Such language makes one wonder about his solutions.

    Mr “I wanna be Prime Minister” please get yourself a 1st class PR team because your ineptitude in this area is blatant.


  3. We have a big problem here. Listen up, folks. The skills required to run most businesses are NOT the skills required for a successful political career in a Western style democracy. That is why so few American businessmen make it to the White House, even though America is teeming with exceptionally able businessmen. In a business, money spent is lost to others
    In a country, government spending is income to the citizens. In a poor country like Barbados, where most people belong to the lower middle class, how easy is it for a wealthy businessman to faithfully represent the voters?


  4. @Grenville Phillips “we received a debt-free island with well-maintained pubic infrastructure.

    A Simple Response: To say that we received a debt-free island makes it seem as though somebody gave us a freeness. Nobody gave us a freeness. I think that you do not understand how hard our parents, and grandparents worked. Maybe yours did not work in the sugar can fields, but all of mine did. From sunrise and sunset, in hot sun and pouring rain, For decades at a time. My grandmother who died after November 30, 1966 spent her whole life working in the cane fields of Mangrove (St. Peter) plantation. She continued working until well after her 80th birthday. Not because she wanted to but because she had to. My father worked at two jobs until all of his children were adults. Not because he wanted to but because he had to. My mother worked in plantation kitchens from breakfast until well after mid-night when there was a party, and parties were frequent as the sugar industry was making good money. She then walked several miles home and had to be in the kitchen by 6 next morning in order to make the master’s breakfast. No we did not receive a debt-free island. We worked for that debt-free island. We worked for it. We sweated for it. We earned it.

    I am here to bear witness.

    @Grenville Phillips “Barbados is fortunate to have had exemplary employers who have effectively trained and cared for their employees.”

    Barbados has NOT had exemplary employers. Every benefit that the workers enjoy today had to be wrested from the employers. Nothing was given without a political and legal fight. Please be honest. Honor the trade unions with the credit which they deserve. Without the trade unions and without the much maligned politicians Bajans today would be no better off than Haitians.

    I am here to bear witness.


  5. If some of the business community today feel that now they have earned enough money and now feel entitled to political power warn then that they will have to EARN that political power. It is not a matter of saying “now it its my turn”

    They will have to wear out shoe leather, they will have to bottle dew. They will have to spend money. ‘Nuff money. Politicking ain’t cheap. They will have to spend money that they have not even earned yet. They will have to leave their spouses and children at home while they go out campaigning. They will have to neglect their elderly parents while they court potential constituents. They will have to miss church, weddings, PTA meeting, funerals, and their children’s graduations so that they are available to [potential] constituents.

    Barbados ain’t America. And we have no use for Donald Trump wannabees.

  6. NorthernObserver Avatar

    He will learn it takes money to get elected, and by targeting those who now have the money as being ashamed of themselves won’t get him very far.


  7. @:Grenville, why are you only seeking Employers to become the political leaders of Barbados? The position calls for people who are willing to become the servants of the people. I do not see the Bizzy’s et al assuming this role. In their mindset they are the masters. This proposed party is elitist if 99.9% of the population will not be eligible for elected office. In my opinion any changes in government must include the voice of the people not their employers making decisions about their lives 24/7. Eight hours a day is enough. Animal farm does allude to this.

  8. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    I asked for an alternative party but not the presentation of a bigots philosphy. I am going to assume that this call to those successful business people are the ones from whom you have appraised and scrutinized. It is obvious, and I am going to assume, that you know most business persons in Barbados are closely tied and lucratively connected with past and present polliticians, their operatives in government departments and other links stemming from both political parties that ensures their standings in Barbados remain far above and beyond. There are Barbadians who are not necessarily business persons but well educated and loyal to the soil that can contribute to the development of their island home without the schemes, collusions, deals, nasty disresprectuful behaviour and treasury tinkering that these two parties have subjected Barbados to over the years. Barbadians want an alternative that is touched by what troubles them; a leader who is willing to hear them; and the managing of their affairs that is inclusive of their cries. Not the type of nonsense and posturing we have been subjected too by these Dees and Bees. If you are going to start, start right!


  9. @Heather

    What is wrong with a call to action which targets people with a track record of managing and executing? A track record of serving? This is where the issue of meritocracy comes into play.It does not rule out the ordinary person but at the same time we need to attract other skillsets.


  10. It is all good for us to jump up and talk about a โ€œthird political partyโ€ without first examining if those persons who present themselves as potential candidates and representatives of the various constituencies are equipped with the requisite knowledge/skills to manage the affairs of Barbados, as well as represent this island in an international environment.

    As I wrote in a previous contribution, during the 2013 general election campaign a guy by the name of Akume Akume sought to offer his services as the potential representative for St. Michael North West on behalf of the PDC. I had reason to be in a Black Rock community one night when Mark Adamson brought Akume and introduced him to a group of us, as the PDCโ€™s candidate for the constituency.

    Donโ€™t get me wrong, Akume may have been an honest man with very good intensions and his heart may have been in the โ€œright place.โ€ However, he experienced some difficulty in articulating how he planned to make a difference, what was his vision for the constituency and what his long-term/short-term plans entailed. His โ€œmutteringsโ€ caused Adamson to intervene and after just over 5 or 6 minutes they left to go โ€œknocking from door to door.โ€

    Unfortunately for them, that brief encounter provided us with enough information to conclude that these guys were unable to โ€œmarketโ€ themselves in such a manner to convince us they were actually serious about their endeavors. Additionally, after that โ€œperformance,โ€ who in their right mind would have wanted to make monetary contributions to their campaign?

  11. Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass.

    All Grenville has done is point out that our Westminster facsimile cannot work for all the reasons I’ve posted here for years.

    I agree that law-makers cannot manage; that is the flaw in our system. However, we have always had good lawmaking.

    In Westminster 600 compete to be elected to form a gov’t from 301 to find 45 cabinet members; 15%. In Bim 30 compete to form a gov’t from 16 to find 18 cabinet members; comedy of fools.

    More importantly, successful men are not often brilliant speakers and even fewer will lower themselves to the current Bajan standards of elective politics. They might, however, certainly in semi-retirement years, volunteer their time to run a ministry if there was a genuine will to change the system and run said ministries like businesses. No successful professional or businessperson is going to manage a ministry hamstrung by the current civil service rules of employment or lack of performance accountability. The real world doesn’t work like Bajan gov’t.

    So we are stuck unless we change the constitution to: 1. de-politicise the Senate so seats are given to national institutions who internally elect representatives to send to the upper house; law-making oversight must function, not rubber-stamping. 2. law-makers must be prevented from holding cabinet seats except for the prime minister, the rest must be professionals from the relevant or associated fields.

    I can see no other way to put us on track.


  12. @ Frustrated Businessman
    You are right that there is a big chasm between ‘law-making’ and ‘managing’. These are two VERY different skill sets, and to date, we have found only about three or four individuals in our 50 years of independence in which these skills coexisted.

    The solution is VERY SIMPLE.

    We need to elect a parliament of lawmakers (in much the same way we now elect the pack of JAs we have), BUT their roles should be limited to lawmaking and shiite talking.
    A select group should be assigned to the role of GOVERNANCE – much like the supervisory committee in co-operatives to ensure transparency, integrity and adherence to established laws and rules…
    …and then the jobs of MANAGING the economy should be ADVERTISED, have qualified applicants shortlisted, interviewed, exposed to Brass Tacts, TV debates etc …and finally CONTRACTED to the job of managing the economy / business of Barbados.

    But this is such a basic, commonsense “Ten-point plan” that there is NO POSSIBLE WAY that it would ever be contemplated by Bajan brass bowls…..

    Besides, ‘politicians’ could then be volunteer positions (as is the case with co-operatives) and hence only those with something to contribute would be interested.
    LOL …. where the hell would we find such persons…?

  13. Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass.

    @ BT.

    Anyone with common sense could solve our problem, your and my ideas are widely held in the professional and business communities and would be supported by the voters who understand our system and the alternatives we propose.

    But those vying for election want their chance to financially benefit from their victories so won’t effect change and most of the voters don’t understand what we just typed.


  14. “Well maintained pubic infrastructure???!!!” Am I the only one who saw that or the only idiot to comment o it?


  15. Grenville is a scientist and is obviously attempting to focus a competency based approach, this is partly reflected in the influence of Malcom Gladwell’s book…lol.


  16. on it


  17. Well I’ve read it through now and the best part of it was still the “well-maintained pubic infrastructure” typo. LOL. Lord, look how I got to spoil my vote!

    Bushie,

    These things should be self-evident but alas…….


  18. Grenville still doesn’t understand that we need a new car. Tinkering, even if done by wealthy engineers, can’t keep this engine running for long.


  19. @Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass. January 27, 2016 at 7:57 AM ” the rest must be professionals from the relevant or associated fields.”

    And who will speak for the non-professionals, also know as the demos, the people, the rest of us, the children, the elderly, the disabled, or as the Bible calls them the halt, the lame, the blind, the the extremely slow learners, those who will never learn even the most basic tasks of daily living such as feeding and washing and dressing themselves, those who have never been able to go out to work, the stay at home mothers, the housewives, those who have never entered the paid work force but have dedicated their lives to successfully raising large families, those who hae looked after elderly relatives, friends, and neighbors without pay, those who have been imprisoned, those who have been imprisoned multiple times, the drug addicts.

    My question is:

    How does capitalism value such people?

    How does Solutions Barbados value such people?

    How does Grenville Phillips value such people?

    Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass value such people?

    How much will Solutions Barbados value the young woman who gives birth to the first, and the second and all the other Zika infected microcepalic babies and whose work/professional lives may end because of the at-home work needed to look after a severely disable child?

    I have met more than one professional woman (teacher, banker etc) whose work life and marriage ended when a severely disable child was born.

    What Solutions does Solutions Barbados have for such “non-working” people?

    How much does capitalism value such people.


  20. @Donna January 27, 2016 at 9:19 AM “โ€œWell maintained pubic infrastructure???!!!โ€ Am I the only one who saw that or the only idiot to comment o it?”

    Good eye Donna.

    Were you the one who corrected my CXC English paper?

    And even while my pubic infrastructure is well maintained (both pre and post Independence) I don’t any way in which it can add value to the State of Barbados.

    But out of a deep patriotism I will try to come up with some creative and high value ways.

    lllooolll!!!


  21. The truth is that all of us need to work harder and better. There is no way around that. And receiving a check from the tax payers for desalinated water not used IS NOT HARD WORK.


  22. And receiving a taxpayer check for tens of thousand of dollars for reading a contract IS NOT HARD WORK.


  23. And suing the government or a media house and receiving a large check IS NOT HARD WORK.


  24. Dear All:

    Thank you for your useful comments. Allow me to respond to some of your concerns.

    Who is to Blame

    A useful analogy follows. A group of passengers need to elect a bus driver, and some primary school children step forward. If passengers elect a 5 year old child to drive their bus, then who is to blame for the inevitable accident?

    My points are that you cannot blame the willing but unprepared children. The blame ultimately lies with those were adequately prepared to drive the bus, but who refused to step forward.

    What is Adequate Preparation

    Barbadosโ€™ economy is not driven by natural resources. If it was, then theoretically, an inexperienced child could manage it. Ours is a small but openly competitive service based economy. In my opinion, employers who have successfully and responsibly managed a business in Barbados for a decade, including caring for a set of employees during economically challenging times, is adequately prepared for national service.

    Barbados has had the misfortune of having irresponsible employers who did not manage their businesses well and terminated their employees during economically challenging times. They squandered the times of plenty and are not prepared to manage a national economy.

    Barbados has also had the good fortune of having exemplary employers. In my opinion, such employers have a public duty to offer themselves for national service. If the electorate then elects the least prepared persons after being given a competent alternative, then they should not complain about high taxes, high national debt, high unemployment, low salaries, poor public services, etc.

    Government Spending and Debt

    For a natural-resource based economy, Government spending can be income to citizens like in the oil-rich middle-eastern states. However, in a service economy, especially a heavily indebted one, Government spending is debt that your children and grandchildren will have to pay โ€“ while you watch them suffer in your old age.

    Debt Free Island

    At our independence, we were given an island that had no national debt, fairly well maintained public infrastructure, and a professional civil service. Most of our (those my age) grandparents worked in the sugar-cane fields (mine included), and most of our fore-parents were slaves. If the word โ€œgivenโ€ is offensive to you, then let us say that our fore-parents earned it for us. That does not affect the fact that we are now risking losing our country as a result of an unsustainable debt.

    Spending Money to get Elected

    Please note that our only intent is to give Barbadosโ€™ electorate a competent alternative of adequately prepared individuals. Please read about our proposed solutions at SolutionsBarbados.com and inform us of any improvements. You will have the opportunity to scrutinise each candidate.

    The point is that we have never been given a fair choice, since the most prepared people did not step forward. Solutions Barbados is trying to facilitate an environment where they can step forward, and if they are not selected, they can return to their business with dignity. We must move beyond the time of ridiculing those who stepped forward but were not selected by the voters. You can be sure that I will feel neither shame nor embarrassment if voters choose another candidate. I will simply feel that did my public duty as a citizen.

    As a side note. I used to visit the Plaza and Globe cinemas to watch the latest Kung fu movies in my youth. During the show, there were always some rude fellows who would put their feet on the chair in front of them, and I noticed that the adults did not intervene. When I turned 30, I determined that I would be the one to act whenever I saw injustice. I would be the responsible adult that I looked for in my youth, regardless of the consequences. I did not have the relevant preparation in past general elections โ€“ I do now, so I am simply stepping forward for consideration.

    Best regards,
    Grenville


  25. The Corruption Perceptions Index 2015 has just been released. I searched the list to ascertain what position Barbados held. To my surprise it has not been listed! You can come up with your own solutions for this omission.

    http://www.transparency.org/cpi2015


  26. And receiving a GIFT from your father in law for the equivalent in today’s dollars of about $200,000 dollars in order to start up your business IS NOT HARD WORK


  27. And inheriting great wealth, lands, houses, equipment, willing workers IS NOT HARD WORK.


  28. And receiving a tax funded education from nursery to tertiatry IS NOT HARD WORK.


  29. And receiving tax money for doing work in spite of submitting a highly inflated bid, but because you know the Minister and can call him at 5:00 a.m. and go to his house at 5:30 a.m. IS NOT HARD WORK.


  30. Importing and distribution drugs which you know are addictive and which has led to the addiction of hundreds (or thousands) of our young men (and women) IS NOT HARD WORK


  31. Why do we like to nitpick?

    Make suggestions on or offline. No wonder so many JAs step forward to join the political class of late.


  32. If you want to step forward Grenville step forward. And if you win good for you. Glad to see that you have corrected the statement that “we were given” and have truthfully stated that “our fore-parents earned it for us. ”

    Language is important. Language is very important. Language is very, very important.

    If we feel that something is free we do not cherish it. But if we understand that it has been EARNED then we know that it has value. Our fore-parents, our parents and we, me too have earned everything in Barbados that has value. It was earned literally by blood, sweat (lots of sweat) and tears.

    For example you earned your degree(s). They were not given to you. I am certain that you know fellows who have as great economic and social opportunities as you have and have not made much of their lives and b=have been pretty much useless to others.

  33. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    What sense it makes in recruiting business persons for positions of governance? The percentage of those who strike deals with government officials is far greater than 50 percent. I do not see how the heck these business persons are going to put the interests of state and people far above their personal interests to push to their businesses to greater frontiers. Barbados is badly compromised island. Thus, the level of screening must borrow deep to find those with a moral base and a backbone filled with integrity.


  34. @ David BU, Just used your link to visit solutions Barbados web site.

    Under “candidates” it shows only Grenville Phillips BSc, BEng, MASc, MURP, CEng, FIStructE, FCIHT, MAPM, MCSCE, MBAPE

    Is the link outdated?


  35. We need more and better work from everybody.

    From manual labourers to to CORPARATE WELFARE BUMS (to use Pierre Trudeau’s phrase) that is, those so called “business people” who subsist off inflated contracts paid for by the over burdened taxpayers.

  36. Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass.

    SS, why would you think social services should suffer by efficient management?

    Are not the most effective pension and health insurance schemes currently operating in Barbados managed and funded by private business? Do you not understand that many tax payers pay for our public health service and NIS and still pay more for those private services? Have you any idea the state of the QEH and national drug service in terms of debt being carried by private companies for no reason other than social conscience?

    You, like so many other voters, really don’t understand the extent of the rot in our entire civil service and government. You might want to cast off your shoulder chips and find out the facts.

    The only reason BDS has not completely collapsed in the past 7 years is that private companies have continued to employ their best people and maintain their infrastructure despite zero profits. This is easily seen in the conflicting numbers between unemployment and corporate tax revenue. Jamaican, Guyanese or Trinidadian employers would have shut their doors the minute business started to decline, history proves that.

    From keeping Cromwell out to fuelling post-independence development, private investors and businesspeople have made it happen. Curse the old sugar industry all you want, we have a QEH and harbour entirely due to the rape of it by the very ‘father’ who preached its demise.


  37. @Hants

    BU understands the names of candidates will be shared soon.


  38. @ Frustrated Businessman
    SS, why would you think social services should suffer by efficient management?
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    …remember that this is SIMPLE Simon…. a typical Bajan…. one who catches the bus /ZR, has a degree from Sir Cave, and whose ambition in life is to not go broke.

    The typical Bajan knows every shiite, has a plaster for every sore …and owns nothing, including the new Toyota they drive or little chattel house (owned by the Credit Union or Capita)

    Look…. Grenville is correct about PROFESSIONALS being needed to manage a complex economy such as ours. His problem (as it always has been) is that he does not know how to express his ideas to brass bowls. Imagine Simple Simon and SSS focusing on roles for the poor, broke and dispossessed in managing the NATIONAL economy….. That is just emotional bullshit…. Even the Bible says that to those who have a lot of talent shall receive MORE responsibility … not those who bury their talents and scrunt… what little THEY have will be taken away ….. FOR A REASON…..their own good.

    Grenville is an excellent example of someone who would do well to manage aspects of our economy, but as a politician, law-maker and communicator, he needs a Jeff /Caswell / Walter to play those roles….

    @ Grenville
    Stick to your strengths and stop with the attempts at communicating…. Politics is NOT an engineering seminar…


  39. Frustrated Businessman aka Republic my ass. January 27, 2016 at 10:28 AM@ “Curse the old sugar industry all you want, we have a QEH and harbour entirely due to the rape of it by the very โ€˜fatherโ€™ who preached its demise.”

    Where did I curse the sugar industry.?

    Why is telling the truth regarded as cursing?

    I too had a better than expected formal education because of the sugar industry. My parent’s labours both for an employer, and before work, after work, and on weekends working for themselves in the sugar industry.

    But none of it was a gift. All of was a result of their hard work.

    So it is untruthful to say that I have ever cursed the surar industry.

    Is it also not true to say that the QEH and the harbour were built off the labour of those who worked in the fields? Is it not true to say that the harbour was built primarily to serve the same sugar industry (not that there is anything wrong with enlightened self interest) and is it not true to say that those who laboured in the sugar industry produced the QEH and that indeed they deserved a decent hospital?

    I am all for hard work and I am all for good work. But we must give credit where it is due. I cannot support this thing where some people seem to believe that working class Bajans are a drain on the economy, when the truth is that the working class are the engine which has consistently driven economic growth.

    Capital without labour is just as useless and labour without capital.

    Give the labourers credit.

    Give the trade unions credit.

    Yes give credit even to the “useless” politicians.

    And give the capitalists credit too.

    None of us can survive without the other.

    Capital is mobile.

    But so too is labour..

    Let me remind you that mobile Bajan (and Caribbean) labour helped to build the Panama canal, powered the British health and transportation industries post world war 2, cut sugar cane in Florida etc. etc.

    Bajan labourers have always been mobile. My great aunt left Barbados by ship and went to Brazil in the 19th century because she was dissatisfied with wages in Barbados. My father left, my siblings left, I left, my children left.

    Be reminded that Bajan labour is highly desired and highly mobile.


  40. If you can take your capital to Switzerland.

    I can take my labour to Saudi Arabia.

    Always take that into account.


  41. @Bush Tea January 27, 2016 at 11:35 AM “Typical Bajanโ€ฆ. one who catches the bus /ZR, has a degree from Sir Cave.”

    You got me wrong. Take note that Bajan taxpayers have paid NOTHING for my education after the age of 18. I paid for my post secondary education myself while holding down a full time job (outside of Barbados)

    And you Bush Tea are the typical Bajan who feels that it makes you a big shot to get into a car to make half a mile journey…I see a terrible waste of foreign exchange, I see you compromising your health, I see you contributing to pollution.

    Typical Bajan.


  42. Dear David:

    Here is a solution.

    Why is it not routine for students to earn a degree while working full time.

    Why are our businesses still in the age of the dinosaurs.

    Why do they shut down blam! at 4:30 or so?

    Why are not our colleges and universities not teaching at least until 10 o’clock at night?


  43. I remember saying to one of my ex-men (he who is now a Permanent Secretary) that I wrote university examinations at 9 o’clock at night.

    He told me that that is impossible. That teaching/learning cannt go on after 7 at night.

    Lol!!!!

    You see now why we have problems?

    Damned dinosaur.

    Just like Bushie.

    In fact I suspect he is Bushie.

    Lol!!!


  44. Relative wanted to arrange a wedding reception for 150 people. Called one of the “leading” catering (white) companies in Barbados.

    This was the response “we are at the bay house. Call back in 3 weeks”

    Of course she never called back. Lol!!!! (who the hell dem tink dem is?) Buncha jokers. In the great whilte north we NEVER ask a potential customer to call back. We take it upon ourselves to serve the customer whenever the customer wants. We know how to do simple things like take messages. We are even willing to break our vacations to serve a potential customer.

    When a leading catering/events company can in the 21st century say “call back in 3 weeks” we clearly a’int ready yet.

    If we cannot run our own 2 x 4 businesses efficiently how the hell do we feel that we can run a whole country?

    Buncha jokers.

    Or to quote my nemesis Bushie, Buncha Brass bowls.


  45. When “leading” businesses in Barbados can close at 4:30 everyday, can close at noon every Saturday, never open on Sundays or public holidays, can close two or three days a year for “stocktaking” can refuse to take customers orders while they are vacation.

    And feel that they ready to run a country?

    Lol!!!


  46. I few years ago on a Saturday I went to a leading Bridgetown business to buy college books for little Johnnie. Could not even get a clerk to look at me.

    Came home went on amazon.com put in my order and Fedex delivered them to my home by Monday afternoon.

    That is the competition people.

    Please note that the Amazon clerk did not ignore me, did not tell me they were at the bay house. Served me instantly and Fedex got the books to my kid on time.

    That is the competition people.


  47. Damned dinosaurs in the public sector.

    Damned dinosaurs in the private sector (maybe even especially in the private sector.)

  48. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Granville Phillip must know, probably, at least a few of the countless Barbadians who are making a name for themselves all over the world. I am sure he also knows quite a few, probably, still living home educated Barbadians with enough morality and the right scruples to launch a programme of meaningful change towards better governance. The governance we crave is one that recognizes the contribution of every joint supplying. We also want that those joints are collectively involved in deciding upon the direction and course Barbados should take when deciding upon projects that require collosal sums of money. We do not want any depiction of the type of piss poor and disrespectful governance that is the trade mark of the Democratic Labour Party. And, the propaganda politics of a Barbados Labour Party in a perpetual state of labour pains ‘and detractor arousals. I am sure that Barbadians looking from the outside in are concern about what is happening and would like to see it change. Time to put the third party advertisement for overseas candidates on the World Wide Web. Forget about those who are already stained and compromise. I do not trust the business sector as much as I do not trust the political one.

  49. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Simple Simon

    The internet has revolutionize every aspect of business and customer service. Speed and convenience are the in words. What words do you constantly hear Barbados use when it comes to efficiency, flexibility and time?


  50. Solutions Barbados look to make a dent first.Dont fool yourself.You wont get a landslide victory to try a thing.But you in the right place at the right time.Challenge the status quo.Convince the stay home voters , the spoil voters to give you an X.You not going to get the staunch B and D voters.You have to wait till they die first.Look to the future man.You sound like if you dont get what you want you will head home exasperated that you at least tried.Sir , if all keeps playing out as it is now,you wont get touch the scepter of power for at least 10 years.I wish you well though because I believe its time to vote alternative, vote independent , spoil the vote or stay to ass home.

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