โ† Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Submitted by David Comissiong, President, Peoples Empowerment Party

On Tuesday 31st May 2016, former Prime Minister Owen Arthur addressed the monthly meeting of the Barbados Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI) and made a call for the privatization of some of the state owned entities of Barbados; the abandonment by Government of some of its โ€œwelfare support programmesโ€; and the implementing of new so-called โ€œprivate-public sector partnerships” that– in Arthur’s words — “would allow the private sector to expand into activity historically deemed to be the preserve of the state.โ€

Needless-to-say, the capitalistic, profit-seeking, private sector businessmen and women who attended the BCCI meeting gave Owen Arthur a standing ovation!

Similarly, on or about the 25th of October 2015, current Prime Minister, Freundel Stuart, addressed a monthly meeting of the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) at the Deighton Griffith Secondary School and informed his audience that the DLP Government intends to take away a number of the โ€œentitlementsโ€ that the Barbadian people currently possess, thereby– in Stuart’s words– โ€œleaving the State only to look after the most vulnerable people in the society.โ€

And although the national newspaper that reported on this meeting did not describe the reaction of Mr. Stuartโ€™s audience to this disclosure, one would not be surprised if Stuartโ€™s compliant, partisan audience also gave him a standing ovation!

What makes these two โ€œPrime Ministerialโ€ speeches truly remarkable is the fact that almost exactly three years ago โ€“ in the General Election campaign of 2013– both Arthur and Stuart were running all over Barbados desperately trying to convince the Barbadian people that they were totally opposed to any suggestion that state enterprises be privatized, or that social entitlements should be taken away from the Barbadian people!

Now, if I had been in the audience at either of these two events, my first reaction would have been to wonder aloud how hypocritical, untrustworthy, and backward mainstream Barbadian politicians can be!

In addition,I would also have been inclined to ask some very concrete, practical and commonsensical questions!

For example, I would have been inclined to ask Mr. Owen Arthur if he could identify exactly which state entities he would sell off to the so-called โ€œPrivate Sectorโ€. Is he proposing to sell off our Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Polyclinics, Barbados Water Authority, television station, Sanitation Service Authority, Grantley Adams International Airport, Bridgetown Port, Barbados Community College, or our Transport Board??

What exactly are you proposing to sell off Mr. Arthur? And when you say that you propose to sell our state entities to the โ€œPrivate Sectorโ€, who exactly do you have in mind?

I would also pose similar questions to Mr. Arthur about his proposal to discontinue some of Governmentโ€™s welfare programmes!

Precisely which programmes or services would you abandon Mr. Arthur? Would you, for example, get rid of our Welfare Department, National Assistance Board, National Disabilities Unit, Barbados Council for the Disabled, Child Care Board, Geriatric Hospital, Childrenโ€™s Development Centre, or the District Hospitals?

Oh, please tell us, Mr. Arthur, which welfare programmes or services you would get rid of, and let us see if, like the BCCI audience, we too can give you a standing ovation!

And perhaps while we are at it we could ask Mr. Stuart what precisely are these โ€œentitlementsโ€ that we Barbadian people possess, and that he is planning to take away from us.

I am aware, Mr. Stuart, that our Barbadian children are entitled to essentially free education in our public primary and secondary schools. Is this the entitlement that you intend to take away? Or is it our right to seek out medical attention at our Government owned polyclinics and Queen Elizabeth Hospital the entitlement that you propose to get rid of?

Might it be, Mr. Stuart, our old age pensionersโ€™ entitlement to be transported for free on the buses of the Transport Board? Surely you would remember that entitlement: it was the one that your Democratic Labour Party featured in a number of high profile television advertisements during the last Election and pledged to defend against the machinations of the wicked Barbados Labour Party!

So please tell us which counter-productive โ€œentitlementsโ€ you have targeted for elimination Mr. Stuart, and let us see if we can applaud you as well?

And finally, to Mr. Arthurโ€™s much cherished โ€œprivate-public sector partnerships!โ€.

Of course, Mr. Arthur knows a lot about โ€œprivate-public sector partnerships”. Why, when he was Prime Minister his BLP administration entered into a contractual arrangement with Mr. Bizzy Wiiliamsโ€™ Ionics Freshwater Ltd., by virtue of which Mr. Williamsโ€™ company was mandated to construct a desalination facility and to provide the Barbados Water Authority (BWA) with 27,000 cubic metres of desalinated water every day over a 15 year period.

When, however, several years later, the Auditor Generalโ€™s department carried out a special investigation into the workings of this outrageously preferential contract, they discovered that:-

  1. The BWA had โ€“ to the ultimate detriment of the taxpayers of Barbados โ€“ agreed to pay a price for the desalinated water that was substantially higher than was merited.
  2. The BWA had contracted to secure more water per day than it had the capacity to receive, and therefore the BWA and the taxpayers of Barbados had to pay the company โ€“ on an ongoing basis โ€“ for work that the company did not have to do; and
  3. The BWA had entered into a contract that virtually guaranteed the company a massive 18 per cent return on its investment !

So why โ€“ Mr. Arthur โ€“ would you want to saddle us with more of these types of outrageous contractual arrangements with the Bizzy Williamses, Mark Maloneys, Bjorn Bjerkhams and Martin Da Silvas of Barbados?

Fellow Barbadians, the sad reality is that the vast majority of the traditional political leaders of Barbados have totally lost their way! And if we โ€“ the people of Barbados โ€“ are not careful, they will end up destroying all that our forefathers struggled and fought for, and will deliver us right back into the hands of a local and foreign minority elite class!

It is sheer folly for any political leader to propose the abandonment of welfare services; the jettisoning of the very few precious social entitlements of our people; the dismantling of our countryโ€™s โ€œmixed economyโ€ model; orย  the delivery up of critical areas of our national system to a traditional elite business class intent on enjoying tax-payer guaranteed, risk-free, business enterprises!

Furthermore, we Barbadians must insist on Barbados being a โ€œcivilizedโ€ society. And in a civilized society, when economic conditions become difficult, welfare services are not cut; the poor and destitute are not abandoned; and the core social entitlements of the people are not dismantled!

In fact, it is precisely in such difficult times that Government must show its true worth as the principal defender of the โ€œGeneral Welfareโ€ of the people!

Some enlightened and patriotic citizen who is close to Owen Arthur and Freundel Stuart needs to pull them aside and explain to them that they are putting themselves on the wrong side of history : that they are in danger of going down in the history of Barbados as black leaders who turned back the hands of the clock , and who played a perfidious role in taking our people back unto the old plantation!


Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

99 responses to “Owen Arthur and Freundel Stuart – Purveyors of Folly and Backwardness!”


  1. What is David Commissiong’s problem? He is always complaining. No one ain’t listening to he. Crop Over kaisos out and band fetes sold out. Plenty pork chops and Guinness available. Harbour Master back in Barbados. De gurls looking good wid their weave and nippy outfits. These are the really important matters. Common entrance results out this week, that will occupy the headlines next weekend. Barbados too sweet fuh trute.


  2. Barbadians should give careful attention to the practical difficulties of maintaining a welfare state before rushing to condemn the prime minister for climbing down from promises made in the past.
    Even countries much wealthier than Barbados have been stretched to the limit by the costs of ‘modern’ health care, and the financial demands made by the greedy doctors who run these systems. In the US, ObamaCare is heading toward bankruptcy, and that’s a system of limited subsidies for private insurance, where poor people still have to pay for most of the medical services they receive. In Canada, Medicare is slowly driving the richest province, Ontario, towards an unsustainable debt burden. In the UK, there are medical horror stories every week because administrators and politicians are desperately trying to conserve resources needed to prevent collapse of the entire system.
    Cuba has had to dig deep to keep its medical services going, and for a very small island like Barbados, access to medical clinics and hospital care without charge just may have to be restricted to the neediest households in the country.
    Politics is the art of the possible. We do not have a right to expect miracles from our leaders.


  3. chad99999 June 6, 2016 at 1:59 AM ” for a very small island like Barbados, access to medical clinics and hospital care without charge…”

    What do you mean by without charge.

    Do know that our income tax rates are very high don’t you? higher than in the U.S. or the U.K. Canada etc.

    So when we show up at a polyclinic for a “free” procedure we have ALREADY PAID FOR IT 10 TIMES OVER.


  4. @Owen Arthur โ€œwould allow the private sector to expand into activity historically deemed to be the preserve of the state.โ€

    Only IF the private sector can provide these services CHEAPER and BETTER. Otherwise we don’t want their grubby hands on out tax money.


  5. @Fruendel Stuart โ€œleaving the State only to look after the most vulnerable people in the society.โ€

    I take it then that he intends to tax only the richest in the society.

    Does that mean that the middle class will receive no services and will therefore pay no taxes?

    If so Mr. P.M. then you have a deal.


  6. @Simple Simon
    It is certainly true that income tax rates are high in Barbados, but it is not true that Barbadians are overtaxed. In Canada, the UK and many other countries, virtually everyone pays dozens of other taxes and user fees in addition to income taxes. Barbadians do not face as many of these additional charges.
    .


  7. I hope that the poorrakey parliament according to Mr Arthur with its useless extravagance is included in the wasteful state enterprises for sale.


  8. Ping Pong you are right. Every time big issues come up, we have some fete or the other to take up our minds and bodies. So not a soul is worried about anything right now.

    Crop Over fever is in the air, then it will be Independence in full swing, then Christmas, after that, Easter, and the mill’s blades go round and round in the wind while its walls crumble.

    While we continue to swim in the island elixir and do frenzied wukk ups to our music that if sober, sounds the same year after year; our politrickcians talk all the crap and possibly even do more harm to the country with their actions.

    Truth is not one of us could not give one tiny little bit of rat’s arse as to what is going on, if we did, we would be out there marching daily until dem in power begin to fly right and do for us what we mandated them to do.

    Barbados is a tiny island that anyone or any government with a good business sense and a love of country could run successfully. Health and Welfare sorted. Crime done. Infratructure perfect. Think state of the art agriculture and food production. Think state of the art solar and eco-systems. Think Nevis, a much smaller island that gets it.

    Instead we have greed and wutlessness and we like it so. Now what fete going on tonight I could go to. Anyone got the party agenda? I could do with a little wukk up after reading Commissiong’s assessment of life on the podium.

  9. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    The political leaders in Barbados are indeed backward, they pimp for votes before elections and lie to the people….after being elected instead of doing their jobs, thet put all their responsibilities into the hands of the business sector, who they all know most of them are crooks, just out for bettering themselves and raising their own standard of living off the backs of taxpayers.

    The whole idea of the politician/business people relationship is to rape the treasury, generate taxpayer funded contracts that would require business people to pay bribes to the leaders, take those contracts to the banks and get mulit-million dollar loans for themselves….the taxpayer is not the beneficiary of these contracts and arrangements and are never factored in as being the recipients if any if those millions…

    Arthur is dishonest and should be held accountable for Barbados not having a national bank, the 140 hardwood houses that disappeared, Perter Harris’…CGI Insurance….acquisition of the Transport Board contract that has soaked the entity in liabilities for over a decade, all the William’s, Maloney, Bjerkham etc scams that soaked the taxpayer under his administration for hundreds of millions of dollars ….. and all the corruption that continued under his watch…that still affects the people to this day, particularly since Thompson and Stuart continued the same nasty practices…against the people.

    Of course the business sector would applaud Owens idiocy, they clearly see a way forward to rape the island and stagnate the people, with Owens help.., what a beast.

    But there are not enough business people to vote him in to destroy the population, so Owen could go scratch. Don’t know what he is trying to achieve, but he is being very destructive, as are all the shithounds for politicians. ..there focus is never the welfare of the people, but lying to the people.


  10. quote ”implementing of new so-called โ€œprivate-public sector partnershipsโ€ thatโ€“ in Arthurโ€™s words โ€” โ€œwould allow the private sector to expand into activity historically deemed to be the preserve of the state.โ€”

    Ah-ah, I tell wunnuh that the Healthcare system would be privatized aka the USA model.

    quote ”Is he proposing to sell off our (1) Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Polyclinics, (2) Barbados Water Authority, (3) television station, (4) Sanitation Service Authority, (5) Grantley Adams International Airport, Bridgetown Port, (6) Barbados Community College, or our (7) Transport Board??”

    My guess is:

    (1) Obviously. Has been on the cards for ages and the QEH , with its (?) inventory acquisition costs and inefficiency, a burden. But ma private hospital would make money, and also be more expensive for bajans. Partially there already, with virtual private fiefdoms in the QEH.

    Bajans need to understand that ‘free’ /(which the taxpayer pays for) healthcare is going, going…

    Good for the insurance companies, who will benefit (much increased monthly income for them (but they do not cover old people).

    (2) BWA- of course, highly profitable, or can be, duh selling water to folks? Hah, someone will ‘acquire’ this and make serious $$$$$$.

    (3) Television station – you do not get it yet, do you? Of course not. This is Guvments (either party) way of spreading information (sic). even at a loss of millions per year… it must be maintained…. to educate you lot. Ha.

    (4) SSA – well duh. Easy money. Collect garbage for money. But, this one is explosive. Because do you really think ‘Good Garbage Collectors Inc’ will collect garbage from the Orleans or the Pine, who will pay them? No, they will collect from Grapes Hill or Bandy Lane and make oodles.

    (5) GAA AND Bport – ha. This is a good one. In many countries Ports are run privately. But then, they are also run according to strict guidelines. A private port in Bim? Snort.

    Then too, Guvments have a paranoia about control over the Port. Not sure it will fly.

    (6) BCC – Heck yes, eventually, along with every other 6th form school. All tertiary will become private in time. These guvments don’t seem keen on maintaining the ‘Barrow’ ethos and neglect the importance of education.

    (7) Transport Board – along with the TV station, another one that should have gone ever since. But a nice voter thing at election. Make it private and ensure that pensioners travel free and school children travel half price.

    Probably not happen though, that is ‘votes’.


  11. quote Ping de Pong ”What is David Commissiongโ€™s problem? He is always complaining. No one ainโ€™t listening to he. Crop Over kaisos out and band fetes sold out”

    Me does detect tongue in cheek. I agree, article should be titled ‘importance of de wuk up’ and focus on de chunes and gurlz and wuk up fetes.

    Dat is where iz at……. Maybe de Bee or de Dee will give way some free tickets, what wid elexshuns now under two years away.


  12. quote balance ”balance June 6, 2016 at 4:54 AM # I hope that the poorrakey parliament according to Mr Arthur with its useless extravagance is included in the wasteful state enterprises for sale.”

    As Mr.Cozier would say ”off the back foot, hammered for four’.


  13. “Bajans need to understand that โ€˜freeโ€™ /(which the taxpayer pays for) healthcare is going, going”

    Yes we do need to understand that there is nothing free in Barbados. We have always paid some of the highest taxes in the world for the services offered by Government and we never grumbled because we could see where the taxes were going but our present predicament spanning both parties is as a result of the unproductive projects and concomitant kickbacks which have saddled the respective governments with unbudgeted for expenditure which is disingenuously laid on the backs of everything else except sleaze and mismanagement.


  14. We have been paying high taxes, also, our national debt has been rising. Draw your conclusions, an equation must balance.


  15. “David June 6, 2016 at 6:43 AM #

    We have been paying high taxes, also, our national debt has been rising. Draw your conclusions, an equation must balance.”

    Forgive my ignorance friend but I cannot conclude on that which I do not understand.


  16. @Real Ting and Crusoe I am very serious (well kinda…)

    Heard at a recent church event (and this is as true as John 3:16): ” Tings brown! I ain’t had a salary increase in 8 years! de cost of living high high high! Dis Gubberment doing real shite! Doan mind doh, I is a party person and I voting D next time. I always vote D! I did always like Barrow from de time I little and I ain’t gwine change now!” May I add, many others expressed agreement.

    David Commissiong should really join a Kadooment band and try enjoy heself dis Crop Over instead of trying to stir up dese Brassbowls!

    Barbados sweet fuh days fuh trute!

  17. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Ignorance…it’s your own political parties DBLP killing you and you fail to recognize it because you are in perpetual denial, so you deserve what you get….and backwardness, it’s your own politicians selling you out to the business people for kickbacks and stealing from the treasury because they are backward and only need you for votes come election time, you as the people, are otherwise useless to the politicians, because ya have to pay taxes anyway….so you deserve what you get, if after 50 years of being robbed, you still do not recognize you are being robbed by politicians and you have the power to do something about it…ya have the numbers, you are the majority..over 260,000 black people.. ..and ya deserve what you get.


  18. @ Ping Pong
    Brass bowls will be brass bowls….as will be their leaders.
    They tend to pursue brass bowlery, and can always be counted on off to sell their birthrights and asse(t)s to the albino-centrics of our world for a bowl of porridge. Just like parros and prostitutes do….

    @ David Come-and-sing-a-song
    Boss man, you got Bushie frighten yuh…
    You are growing in statue with almost frightening alacrity…
    You are seeing things with a refreshing new perspective…
    You seem to have learnt from, and discarded, your propensity to loiter at the doorsteps of the political class – awaiting handouts.
    Like Caswell, you seem to have had your ‘Saul-Paul’ transformation…

    Dare we hope…?
    Can Bajans trust….?
    Shiite man…. ORGANISE something nuh?? …something DIFFERENT…

    Wait!! … Why don’t you BUP? ๐Ÿ™‚
    There are no patents, no copyrights.
    David(BU) won’t sue …or even claim ownership..


  19. David C like most Bajan men, taken the “Pride” out of the country’s “Motto” and awash themselves with it..! Where’s the “Industry” among these “Lot-a-long-talk-men..!?


  20. You can’t ever accuse David C of talk.

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

    Capitalism is the uneven distribution of wealth; socialism is the even distribution of misery.

    There is nothing the gov’t and civil service does that the private sector can’t do faster, cheaper and better.

    If the teefin’ is ever going to be brought under control, the handling of money and assets by the gov’t and civil service has to be minimised.

    And to correct Comissiong (not that his ranting Marxist fantasising could ever be corrected), I was standing 40 feet away from the podium in Bay Street on the last night before the 2013 general election when Owen Arthur stated clearly that public burdens had to be privatised. That’s when I realised the BLP would lose the election and we would be condemned to five more years of inept, vision-less mismanagement and further economic decline.

    Our people want freeness, not opportunity.


  22. The โ€œWelfare Stateโ€! instead of a piece meal approach favoured by politicians, letโ€™s put everything on the table to be examined under a harsh political/social reality. Letโ€™s start with Education, why a CEE in 2016? Why should children be bussed halfway across the island to attend โ€œAโ€ or โ€œBโ€ school? If they lived in St. Peter or St. Lucy; St. Philip or St. George why shouldnโ€™t they be channeled to the local HS in the area i.e. St. Lucy Secondary, Princess Margaret or St. George Secondary? Why should busesโ€™ ZRs and private vehicles be spewing all those noxious fumes on the highway daily, why should those massive traffic jams be de jure in Barbados? Has anyone ever conjured up the ancillary costs of transporting a child from St. Joseph to Bridgetown to attend school? If you have read this far and am not convinced that I am talking shite, then you would know that it would mean that the children of the DCโ€™s of the world would be going to the Parkinsonโ€™s or the St. George Secondary and that just wouldnโ€™t do.

    When the rubber meets the road many of these talking heads are just like the majority of us we want to milk the cow but donโ€™t want to feed it, how about University fees for students? That went up like a lead balloon and teachers today are fighting to be paid for work they didnโ€™t perform.

    Sea Water and Sand.


  23. @ David C

    More privitisation under the current system would be pure folly.
    But with proper rules in place privitisation could save the taxpayer a lot of money.
    Who will implement the new rules?
    And stop the gravy train?
    Not the BDLP.

  24. Calling a spade Avatar
    Calling a spade

    REAL TING June 6, 2016 at 5:13 AM #

    [Crime done. Infratructure perfect. Think state of the art agriculture and food production. Think state of the art solar and eco-systems. Think Nevis, a much smaller island that gets it.]

    Real Ting you are unreal. St. Kitts/ Nevis is the most crime and murder ridden little nation per capita around. Hard to grasp that Nevis’ population is smaller than St. Andrew but they slaughter each other at ISIS pace. Your tiny Nevis doesn’t get it ,research a better example.

    The elephant in the room for Barbados is foreign exchange we cant get enough investment/ new money into the country. The one legged economy of tourism is unsustainable.


  25. @ Frustrated B
    Capitalism is the uneven distribution of wealth; socialism is the even distribution of misery.
    There is nothing the govโ€™t and civil service does that the private sector canโ€™t do faster, cheaper and better.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Generally true.
    The Government and Civil Service do a lotta shiite, …and no doubt the private sector can do that faster and better too…. (Thinking of Flow/SLIME here)

    Boss, the problem with your ‘privatisation plan’ is that we had that already.
    It was referred to as the PLANTATION SYSTEM.
    No doubt some Bajans would love to return there…. but most of us are not so stupid….

    NOTHING beats a co-operative system …where we ALL own the damn plantation, and where the plantation money has to be accounted for with 100% transparency.

  26. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Cooperative system is the only way to go….the UK, Canada etc have their cooperative systems blazing a trail in their countries and laughingly leave the stupid corrupt little island leaders with their greedy, private sector and privitization schemes.

    The private sector in Barbados have bad track records…ably aided and abetted by greedy, unknowledgeable politicians.


  27. Sargeant wrote ” Why should children be bussed halfway across the island to attend โ€œAโ€ or โ€œBโ€ school?”

    Billie Miller created a workable solution to address this problem when she was MOE.

    I guess there was too much opposition from those who were concerned about lowering the standards of HC and QC.


  28. @ David Commisong

    The answer from both Mrrs. Stuart and Arthur is ………all of the above.

    Unfortunate, Mr. Commisiong you, yourself, was a fervent supporter of the BLP regime when the same OSA carried out the implementation of the most perverse, neo-liberal, Washington Consensus policies, for decades.

    When he was selling off Bajan lands to the highest bidder there was not a whimper from you. You had no objections then. When a government’s central policy is to sell off the commons, why did you support that government and not call for land reform. A land reform that never happened since slavery.

    As a self-proclaimed leader, a thinker of some note, what did you believe these vicious policies of OSA will logically lead?

    We will tell you so that when these same house niggers wake up one morning and start to articulate the re-enslavement of Bajans you wouldn’t act like Columbus. You are now discovering what we have known for 2 decades.

    Now OSA is where he is, politically, his main interest is the continuation of the service to the oligarchs which he provided as PM, this time as high paid ‘consultant’.

    We were arguing for years that the policies of successive GOB were for the consolidation of all resources into the hands of the elite. And this is already well-advance as evidence by CAHILL, the transfers to Bizzy, COW and the rest. These policies can only continue, on steroids.

    So if you think some raassoul body kay whether dat ole woman from down dey dying, in pain, in her bed for lack of medicine, think again.

    We have seen the criminal in West Africa, up close and for many years, who sold Africans into slavery, and the Arthurs and Stuarts and Mottleys are not dissimilar.

    We have suggested that as a class the elite in Barbados should be eviscerated. Our favoured method has been the guillotine, but only when Bajans find themselves in a neo-slavery condition are they to wake up half foolish one morning and start killing their new en-slavers.


  29. Talk, talk and more more talk, The atmosphere has too much methane as it is. I’d like to see Barbados make WORLD NEWS for standing up to Empire. Do something great for once. Let the other nations follow. Action starts at the atomic level and compared to other nations Barbados is an ‘atom.’ The only thing that power bows to is a greater power.
    I said it before and I’ll repeat these MOFOs that call themselves polieticians in Barbados owe allegiance to Empire. They’ve made their blood oaths and they can’t get out alive. They see what happen to Barrow and Tom and they too will be heart-attacked it they try to get out of their oaths so they will continue to prostitute your children and children’s children to Empire.

    UNLESS

    You the people stand up to them and make them back to hell off. Stop thinking that you belong to a party because there’s no party they are both the same….like George Carlin said “Its a big fucking club and you ain’t in it.”

    Each voter/citizen has more in common with each other (whether or not you like it than you have with the polieticians). Come together and eliminate them. The only power they have is what you give them. They will stay on this path until YOU, THE PEOPLE STOP them.

    What the people in Barbados have on their side too is the climate. You don’t live in the cold where you have to worry about getting heat in winter. You have the SUN at your back and you have food.

    SHUT THE FUCKING COUNTRY DOWN until they back up off you. Maloney, Bjerkum and all the other parasitic crackers will have to return to their dark, cold caves.

    SHUT YOUR MOUTHS AND THE COUNTRY DOWN!


  30. oh lawd, post getting snatched again!


  31. Capitalism is a virus. Unless it is destroyed, utterly, like any virus it will continue to feed on the mass.

    And those of you who think the credit union movement is somehow safe. We have a warning for you too. Unless this movement goes on the attack …………………………. not too many years will pass before a government of Barbados seeks to privatize it to the oligarchs as well.

    For too long this movement has pretended that if it just keeps its head down and continue what it has been doing, mostly good, it could continue to exist. The only problem is that the controllers of the GOB do not recognize such delusions.

    Recent attempts by the central government to tax the movement should be seen through this frame.


  32. @ David Comissiong

    As usual, your comments are essentially based on the social, political, and economic ideologies articulated by Marx and Engels in their pamphlet, โ€œThe Communist Manifesto.โ€

    Interestingly, you have not suggested any methods you would employ to finance some of these unsustainable โ€œwelfare support programmesโ€ without INCREASING TAXES or INCURRING ADDITIONAL DEBT.

    The REALITY of the situation is that EVERY SOCIETY is faced with the problem of SCARCITY, because the existing supply of resources is insufficient or limited to produce the quantities of GOODS and SERVICES that would be REQUIRED to SATISFY its citizens during a given time period. Hence, the CHOICE to PRODUCE more of ONE GOOD/SERVICE REQUIRES producing LESS of ANOTHER GOOD/SERVICE.


  33. Is it a crime or anarchistic to say SHUT your MOUTHS and the Damn Country down. To say that the government derives its power from the people and that the people have more power than the government and that the people should use their power against the government and its cronyism? is that illegal. Let Bejerkum Baloney and the others return to their dark,cold caves. No more SERVITUDE? Is that illegal?


  34. “When he was selling off Bajan lands to the highest bidder there was not a whimper from you. You had no objections then.”

    Name one piece of land owned by the Government whch was sold off by Mr Arthur to the highest bidder.


  35. Oh hopping crickets dis economic discourse all ova de place. Pon eva blog I dus read here dey does have a post like: >

    And each time it does get nuff likes. Jesus lord people get effing real nah.

    Eva cuntry must have they wuk-up parties to ease de tension and most importantly generate some serious economic activity. If fetes SELL_OUT dat mean, drinks gin sell, clothes get buy, mechanics gotta fix trucks and ting, and musicians get a gig. Oh shiittte the list is endless.

    Do you peeps know how many house owners getting some cash from AirBnb or dem udder sites in coming weeks??? Do you stop and tink bout dem things too…how many taxi drivers or car rental places gine get some coin…de beach vendors dem. My friend down in St James who does rent out he boat and do air surfing and all that nice stuff. He getting some blenzy.

    Come-a-sing-a-Long mekking interesting comments which in got nutting to do wid 11-plus or wukking up. So leh we stop wid dese gimme remarks begging for likes and discourse de ting serious do.

    Eva mornng we does get up and most ah we does go and shiite at some point in the toilet. Eva morning some serious economic activity is also produced. If we can’t rationally discuss de bodily eff-fluence and the serious economic activity and understand dat both of dem vitally important to sustaining we life den we really should stay in bed!! Seriously.

    @Artaxian, Come-and-sing-Along ask proper questions. Dat really ain’t nah marxist screaming. De economic facts are de economic facts bro.

    How can we actually fully privatize transport…I know that things have improved muchly since Rocklyn days but is there an actual business case for ‘REASONABLE’ fares in a public transport environment in a Barbados?

    The gov’t wud have to cap rates and den have to subsidize cause there are always off-routes in a small island and of course we want to maintain some equilibrium to our seniors.

    And even in the event of significant private or private-public-partnership a propa government wud have to employ dem officials dem to inspect and confirm that standard of citizen care are being maintained in trute.

    Dis private talk is real pretty but the brother asked good questions.


  36. @ Balance

    Owen Arthur created a market for land in Barbados. This policy made no distinction between buyers whether local or foreign. That pernicious policy saw land prices continually escalate, ushered in such a real estate bubble that Barbados was at one time the most expensive real estate in the WORLD.

    We are not as narrow minded as you always seem to be. We are talking about a generalized government policy, where government is most important in directing ‘development’, not necessarily a particular piece of land owned by the Crown, as you seem to want to believe.

    If you want a case, we have one that is even worse. Remember the land that OSA got his boys to buy somewhere in St. James and then proceeded to sell it to Sandy Lane for expansion, after giving his boys planning permission guarantees. Well this is an even more egregious case that you demanded of us.

    Further, no development, including on agricultural lands could happen unless government has a say. The fact that lands might have been owned by the oligarchs makes their general policy no less vicious.


  37. Looka my crossss though…teh whole quite get catspraddled…so not a bit a sense can’t be made. WTF!

    Here is that start-up again: Oh hopping crickets dis economic discourse all ova de place. Pon eva blog I dus read here dey does have a post like: – ‘What is David Commissiongโ€™s problem? … No one ainโ€™t listening to he. Crop Over kaisos out and band fetes sold out. Plenty pork chops and Guinness available…. These are the really important matters. Common entrance results out this week, that will occupy the headlines next weekend. Barbados too sweet fuh trute.’

    And each time it does get nuff likes. Jesus lord people get effing real nah…..


  38. The writer of the article is a socialist so it is necessary for him to protect what he belives he is entitled.


  39. Brathwaite
    you dun know that you aint saying nuffing! Yuh should see Ping ponging pun a fat bumsee to some sweet kaiso dis weekend! Commissiong got to get a life man. Leh we party…pork and Guinness. As YOU wrote more economic activity gun happen because of fete than Commissiong’s rants. Bajans vote a gubberment to run de cuntry and when de time come we gun vote anudder one to run de place. In de mean time leh we get we weave, nippy dippy gurlz, food and fete.


  40. Brathwaite June 6, 2016 at 12:08 PM #

    Perhaps your definition of โ€œโ€˜REASONABLEโ€™ fares in a public transport environment in a Barbadosโ€ is paying $2.00 to any destination in Barbados, rather than a system of paying according to distance travelled.

    We often brag about the โ€œeconomic superiorityโ€ that separates Barbados from many of our Caribbean neighbours, yet islands such as St. Vincent, St. Lucia, St. Kitts, Dominica and Grenada, have successful privatized public transport systems, despite bus fares being apportioned according to destination.

    An individual, for example, living in New Montrose in St. Vincent and working in Georgetown has to pay approximately EC$7 per trip or EC$14 per day travelling to and from work. Travelling from Arnos Vale to Kingstown is about EC$2 per trip.

    โ€œAnd even in the event of significant private or private-public-partnershipsโ€ in these island, their governments do not โ€œhave to employ dem officials dem to inspect and confirm that standard of citizen care are being maintained in trute.โ€

    Maintaining subsidized transport, free health care at the point of delivery, free A, B, C, D and E is not sustainable for Barbados, which does not have any natural resources. Therefore, to be able to provide more than one service, there will be a need to provide less of another set of services.

    The reality is revenue from taxation is insufficient to consistently provide โ€œpublic goodsโ€ and โ€œwelfare programmes,โ€ as well as to finance other government expenditure. As such, the government must INCUR debt or INCREASE TAXATION to finance these โ€œentitlements.โ€

    In your opinion, โ€œthe brother asked good questions,โ€ but he failed to address the resulting financial implications.

  41. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    But…the writer of the article is speaking truth…AC….even if I dont believe in a social philosophy, another failure, your backward political masters are presiding over a dead, useless, failed system….and they do not have the intelligence to upgrade and/or do something more useful, create a new system or adopt the cooperative system…they are failures, of course with you and Alvin following them and being thrir mouth piece, they could be nothing else.

    Has your prime minister Fruendel Stuart take the Auditor General’s 2015 report to the DPP yet, to initiate an investigation of all those bad contracts with the private sector, all the taxpayer’s money missing from the treasury….has Fruendel done his job and started a criminal investigation…
    ne pas vous les gens voient le cauchemar qui va se dรฉrouler prochainement.


  42. One day coming soon,Barbados will join those countries where a freed press hunt wrongdoers publicly as Netanyahu is feeling the heat.

    http://gu.com/p/4kg6b/sbl


  43. EWB said one day Bajans will wake up and realize they don’t own this country any longer.The Chinese(aka the Chinks) and now the Russians(aka the Soviets)are both next door in Guyana in a serious way on the door step of Caricom.


  44. To Ping Pong’s point a person was heard on a radio station this morning quarreling about a fete on the weekend shutting down at 3am.

  45. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Always knew Netanyahu to be a dangerous fraud and liar.


  46. What Truth a bunch of political rhetoric that simply says that it is in the best interest of barbados to remain a a welfare state even if govt cannit afford ,His loud verbosity against both PM is simply a grading against a capitalist system one which he tries to trade for socialism with all the bells and whistle attached


  47. wait wait, ac defending privatisation? #noshame


  48. Enuff no not at all just seeing the forest for the trees in that the message which is being sent by the messenger involves entrapment and deceit placed on a hot bed of self interest. A sale pitch of that type should also have a sign stating ” buyer beware”


  49. @Gabriel June 6, 2016 at 3:18 PM “EWB said one day Bajans will wake up and realize they donโ€™t own this country any longer.The Chinese and now the Russians are both next door in Guyana.”

    So what do you expect us to do? Declare World War 3 on the Chinese and the Russians?


  50. Maintaining subsidized transport, free health care at the point of delivery, free A, B, C, D and E is not sustainable for Barbados, which does not have any natural resources. Therefore, to be able to provide more than one service, there will be a need to provide less of another set of services.

    The reality is revenue from taxation is insufficient to consistently provide โ€œpublic goodsโ€ and โ€œwelfare programmes,โ€ as well as to finance other government expenditure. As such, the government must INCUR debt or INCREASE TAXATION to finance these โ€œentitlements.โ€

    Yes this the above is indeed true but this is compounded by mismanagement of what little we have and sleaze. The contractual arrangements with Mr Williams and Mr Maloney are cases in point.

The blogmaster invites you to join and add value to the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

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

Continue reading