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Submitted by David Comissiong, Clement Payne Movement
Alleged chemical attack on the Syrian people

Who or what gave US President Donald Trump and the Government of the USA the right to set themselves up as the prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner of the Government of Syria? The short and simple answer is that neither President Trump nor the US Government possessed any such right!

International Law stipulates that it is the United Nations Security Council — a body that represents the Will of the entire community of nations — that possesses the right and responsibility to determine whether a breach of the peace or an act of aggression has been carried out by any nation or regime, and whether a punitive armed response is required.

Thus, if it is being alleged that the Assad governmental administration of Syria carried out an inherently illegal chemical weapons attack on the people of Syria, it is the responsibility of the UN Security Council to investigate the matter; to make a determination of innocence or guilt; and if guilt is established, to decide upon the appropriate response and punishment.

Virtually the entire World Community accepts that this is the settled International Law position.  But not the USA!  No, not a country that has wedded itself to the delusional and manifestly fraudulent doctrine of American Exceptionalism”.  President Trump and virtually every other member of the US Establishment is capable of casually dismissing out-of-hand the settled, positive logic and rationality of International Law by engaging in a form of delusional “pseudo – logic” that goes something like this:-

“The USA is a special and inherently ‘good’ nation. And since the USA is an inherently “good” nation, it means that its actions and policies will always be based on and for “the good”.  Thus, the ordinary rules of International Law do not apply to the USA, and the USA is therefore at liberty to take unilateral action to impose its inherently “good” policies on a backward and wicked world”.

This is the kind of warped “logic” that President Obama used to justify his sending of drones half-way around the world to assassinate men and women who have never been tried and convicted in any Court of law, and to do so even if it means killing dozens of totally innocent children, women and men who simply happen to be in the locality of the assassination target when the missiles come raining down. No doubt,this is also the kind of warped “logic” that Trump used to justify last night’s “punitive” missile strike on Syria. And mind you, this kind of “logic” comes from a nation that has committed genocide against its native people; that enslaved Africans for almost 250 years; that inflicted segregation and lynching on black Americans for over 100 years; that is the only nation on earth to drop atomic bombs on human beings; that used chemical weapons against the Vietnamese and other Asians; and that has illegally intervened in and invaded scores of countries, among a host of other crimes.

As much as we may dislike President Assad of Syria and his Administration we all still need to say loudly and firmly to US President Donald Trump that the USA  is NOT an exceptional country, and that like every other country in the world, the rules of International Law apply to it too! If we fail to do so, we will actually be promoting the “Law of the Jungle” where “might makes right” and small nations like ours have no rights that need be respected.

By  unilaterally launching a missile attack on Syria Donald Trump has actually committed a crime under International Law. And if International Law is to have any meaning or validity all responsible governments of the world must now call upon the United Nations Security Council and the International Criminal Court to launch  War Crimes investigations against both Presidents Trump and Assad and their Administrations.


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290 responses to “THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS “AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM””


  1. @ David Comissiong
    What plate is full what??!!
    Surely you are aware of history…?
    One truly talented man can change the whole damn world.

    Like Caswell, your plate is only ‘full’ because you are doing the wrong shiite…. taking world class talent and seeking to apply it to petty, shiite squabbles that should rightfully be left to Bushie and his whacker.

    You are undoubtedly a natural leader, yet you seem to be looking for someone to follow. What BDLP what? those people are all beneath you… as are the PEP, the pan African network and the other nonsense issues that currently occupy your time and efforts.

    Hillary Beckles started a revolution in Barbados in the 1990’s when he undertook to bring the message of black enfranchisement -and to delve into the history of suppression that we endured.
    He was sidetracked by the very people that he condemned, and sold out for a knighthood and a kingdom on a hill, but there remains a role for a national EDUCATOR and LEADER who is able to explain the truth in a way that people understand; who has been through the ropes of politics; and who has the intestinal fortitude and the balls to say it like it is…. and MOST importantly, whose heart is with the people.

    The problem with being a true leader is that yours then need to be a very public and open book – and Bushie gets the impression that you still desire the quiet private life of the ordinary citizen….

    You CANNOT have it both ways….

  2. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    https://imgur.com/Rm3xthE

    Carl “the coward”…..is this the poster that offended you, I just had to go through the posters link with a fine toothed comb to find this, you really are a BU pimp and stalker though Carl..

  3. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    https://imgur.com/0gmtRrc

    This one is one of my favorites, believe it or not I have never scrolled though them before, I suppose Carl scrolls through the link every day….and is nit addicted..lol

    BTW… where is Piece, I miss him and his grandson’s brilliant posters, they are riveting. .

  4. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    http://i.imgur.com/rq88FSb.jpg

    This poster definitely foretells what the majority population can expect because of 9 years of incompetence and selling out their own people, from the present government.

  5. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    https://imgur.com/ssaavN7

    Shame on Fruendel the Fraud & Co.


  6. @Bushie, as I often have reason to say, you are undoubtedly the most scary scribe on BU. You give voice to (write) some of the absolutely most seditious, anarchic and undemocratic screeds and then just nonchalantly segue to normalcy as easy as – well – ‘ Sunday morning’.

    You can offer Gaddafi and Saddam as examples of despotic rulers of “… world class [societies] examples of economic development and enfranchisement…..before being ‘liberated’.”

    Really now!

    By ‘liberated’ are you seguing to normalcy because these leaders who had previously been courted, supported and facilitated in their supreme rule by western world leaders were then hounded and killed by those same world leaders AFTER ‘spitting in the face’ by bombing planes, invading other countries and threatening to start worldwide death with chemical warfare!

    Yes as you said ” life is much more complex than” simplistic read-outs of major issues so surely be straight-up. Don’t advance such comments couched in sweet soundng simple jargon.

    If Mr Comissiong is ” seeing ahead of the crowd in many respects when he looks at such [despotic] models” then how in God’s name can you conflate that/them/him to “…the best possible model – the Cooperative…” where there is absolutely no room for forced rule by any one ‘strong-man’.

    Bro, taking you at your writings here you are one very dangerous fella. What you really want and what you say are two totally different things.

    But then so are the majority, anyhow! LOLL.


  7. Well, well, all of this foolishness you’re doing here you wouldn’t do if you had to take off that mask.

    This is what “freedom” allows.


  8. Trumps AmeriKKKa wants all your social media passwords to cross the border


  9. @ Dribbler
    You clearly have comprehension issues with Bushie …so let us just agree to differ in peace…

    If you cannot follow simple logic that says that it is a ROLE and DUTY of leaders to, on occasion, SUPPRESS some of their people, …and the many different examples of how such suppression is critical for overall system integrity, then why should Bushie even bother to entertain you…?

    Like many who have brought into the albino-centric propaganda, the mere mention of catch words like ‘Gaddafi’ or ‘Saddam’ or ‘Castro’ triggers off in your mind the very geneses of evil that your brainwashing has been designed to create.

    Unfortunately, the facts on the ground often do not support your mental image. Do some basic research on Iraq or Libya before the punitive sanctions …and the following wars…..and tell us how the economic and social facts fall.

    Plant two fruit trees.
    Regularly prune one of any suspect-looking branches, ….and other mis-shaped, mis-directed or other odd growths…
    Do not hurt a branch on the other one. let every one do as it likes….
    Which tree would you expect to be successful, productive and healthy?

    LOL
    Why do you think David (BU) allows the whacker on BU?
    …without it, people like you,Carl Moore and Peter Wickham would have the BU lawn full of shiite weeds and vines….
    ha ha ha

  10. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Dont mind trump, he wa recently christened by the Syrians..so he is AKA Abu Ivanki Ameriki…lol

    Carl “the coward” Moore and BU stalker, the day I reveal myself, what GP did to you will be childs play.and there is not a thing you or your masters can do about it…so let that bother you even more going forward.

  11. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    dpD

    Chuckle……only know you learn about the fact that Bushie speaks with forked tongue.

    He can be coherent at times and make valid contributions…..very few and far between I must add, as most of the time he is on is alba…. something rant without basis in any logic……..he was ever so.


  12. Vinnie
    It is Bushie’s conscience pricking him because he knows Africans MURDER the Albinos in Africa, babies preferred of course, for magic portions prepared by Witch Drs—-deed and fate this is FACT! google and research it. Negative/ evil vibes got he!


  13. Here we go again whether by design or not.


  14. @Bushie, so supremely good and subliminally dangerous as ever to wit: “If you cannot follow simple logic that says that it is a ROLE and DUTY of leaders to, on occasion, SUPPRESS some of their people, …”.

    Oh, I follow the simple logic only too well. But please follow ‘my logic’ and appreciate that I am fearful of you, senor, because you parse Putinesque rhetoric as glibly as if you are discussing the actions of ….let’s say, Lyndon Johnson.

    You speak ever so eloquently of “…how such suppression is critical for overall system integrity”. This the same man who ridiculed Trump’s attempt to ‘critically’ suppress his US version of ‘system integrity’ just last week.

    The man who speaks here ad infinitum on the ‘bowlery’ of our system and leaders (a sure form of suppression) can yet so easily embrace an everlasting ‘dangerous’ strong-man leadership ethos of the type that would squash freedoms.

    Can I get off your merry-go-round. I am dizzy. LOLL

    One day you must write a BU treatise and explain how we differentiate good despots from bad ones: how Barrow’ suppression of Black Power voices was all good but Eric Gairy’s suppression of rights was ‘critical for overall system integrity’ like Qaddafi’s or Saddam’s.

    Fidel Castro was a tremendous leader of that we can agree. Fidel Castro was also a very flawed leader. On that we should also agree. Excellent leaders are ‘good’ regardless of their political point on the compass.

    Yet, as much as his original suppression was needed to develop the society…his continued suppression as late as into the turn of this current century was atrocious and counter intuitive to the entire ethos of a self-sufficient, well-educated people for which he worked so effortlessly to develop.

    BTW, you know well that I am not a fan of your neologisms as I do not understand this albino-centric mantra of yours. My sense of justice was formed right here in BIM under the Hon EWB and then JMGM Adams et al. What’s so ‘albino’ about those two fellow Bajans!

    Your rhetoric that praises strong leaders who clearly overstayed their time and the one sweetly balancing their over-reaching with plaudits of the force of a society’s ‘cooperative’ power is the clash of two countervailing forces.

    That you believe folks can’t see that absolute dichotomy or the perverse ‘end justifies the means’ model in your reasoning is amusing to me.

  15. angela Skeete Avatar

    So Trump goes into Syria and drop bombs to save Syrian babies from the tyranny of Assad but refuse to let them have refuge status in america . both leaders shares an equal debt to these people of Syria for justice and dignity denied them


  16. LOL @ Money B
    Who knows…??
    …perhaps those Africans are thinking long term …and making vital present day sacrifices in order to protect their great grand children…???

    Once bitten…..


  17. David,
    Forgive me for being like the Bushmen of the Kalahari—relentless. Said Bushmen will run down a quarry for a day or more, to the said animal begs to be eaten.


  18. Bushie,
    Your knowledge of biology is severely limited if you dont know that African Albinos are black people. hahaha


  19. Yes @ Vincent he can be quite the ‘duopolist’ at times. But give him his due, his writings are often provocatively good…after one gets past his favored ‘new words’ and a few other unsupported facts.

    BTW, @ Bushie…Isn’t a valid question ‘why were there punitive sanctions in the first place’ or ‘why are there attempts to bring democracy to nations which have existed well under despotic rulers’.

    There is current talk from US Ambassador at UN about Syrian regime change. Why? Another Iraq, then! That pottery rule still applies: break it and you own it!

    You said before that life is complex and of course it is. But the West educates these despots at their top universities and induces them willfully to western ways, to invest their billions in the banking system, sells them armaments and all manner of expensive wares and ask them to abide by western rules.

    How then can that spigot be turned off so easily to ‘suppress’ the desires of their people!

    I definitely await your treatise!


  20. @ Dribbler
    Boss, you are much slower than even Bushie feared…

    Can you not see the difference between ‘praising’ Gaddafi, and pointing out that the FACT that he actually SUPPRESSED some of his people was not, in and of itself, a bad thing….?
    Shiite man Dribbles, do we have to give you the ABC version? …BU is a big boy’s forum ain’t it?
    Did Bushie not clearly say that Saddam and Gaddafi were no better or any worse than the western leaders who murdered them…?

    The POINT being made to Curious (because Bushie suspects that there lies a capacity to get it) is that the “crime” for which these “despots” were condemned and executed – and their countries destroyed, …may in fact NOT have been a crime at all – but a duty of a WISE leader.

    As to differentiating between ‘good’ and ‘bad’…
    You may have heard of the word ‘WISE’…. ??
    It describes a condition where one is under the guidance of the ultimate beings who created the whole experience called life…..?
    Without it, a leader is foundering in brass bowlery, and it really does NOT matter if he is a democrat, republican, shah, despot or a benefactor….. and WITH it, it does not matter either…

    Before you go off on another tangent talking nonsense, the co-operative philosophy is different in that, it puts the power into the hands of the collective community, – not that this in itself of necessity brings wisdom, but at least they then take responsibility for their OWN damn fate.


  21. @ Money B
    YOUR knowledge is even more severely limited … if you don’t know that ALL people are really ‘black’ people…… some, however, with various DNA flaws…. 🙂
    ha ha ha

  22. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    Money B

    Chuckle…..he knows not that he knows not and as such he must be pitied…..or put another way a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing.

  23. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    dpD

    Chuckle…..I have given Bushie his due……all clocks with the batteries out or the winders unwound are correct once a day and sometimes twice.


  24. Money
    As you know whites are inferior not superior


  25. As Bushie said many time before Vincent…..
    Having nothing to say, you make sure that you come on BU with painful regularity, to say it.

    You must be at least intelligent enough to know by now, that sticks and stone may break Bushie’s bones (and that is only if BBE is in agreement with such results)…. but nonsense words and dropped remarks are a waste…

    If you have a point or a question that shows Bushie’s error …PLEASE let us have it (them)…. but you CANNOT keep saying that Bushie is “always wrong” ….without saying how, …and what then, is ‘right’.

    Do you understand that Bushie gets these positions and answers ‘second-hand’…?
    Bushie is not bright like GP, Artax, Tron and MME…. Bushie was called and handed a damn whacker and sent out to keep shiite in check…. Bushie is just OBEDIENT!!!

    If you have sensible answers …let us have them.


  26. Mr. Comissiong, You are a typical ‘Leftists’ ideologue fellow traveller, of the likes of George Bernard Shaw to Bertolt Brecht to Susan Sontag, who venerated mass murderers such as Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Castro, and Ho Chi Minh, habitually excusing their atrocities while blaming America and even the victims, for the crimes.

    Comissiong, you highly venerate that beastly tyrant Fidel Castro, who distinguished himself as one of the most monstrous human-rights abusers in the world; where HALF A MILLION human beings have passed through Cuba’s gulag, giving Castro’s despotism the HIGHEST political incarceration rate per capita ON EARTH!

    Firing squads in Cuba, under the TYRANNY of Castro have carried out more than FIFTEEN THOUSAND EXECUTIONS.

    The DENIAL-EXCUSE-JUSTIFICATION syndrome, so typical of sick ‘Leftists’ is glaringly manifested in your mind-set Mr. Comissiong!

    In all the comments made marking Castro’s death – from sons of Cuban immigrants who risked their lives to escape communism, to a brain-dead Canadian idiot who got lost on his way to a boy-band audition and ended up Prime Minister – one column stuck out to me the most. This article by Cuban-American author Humberto Fontava, who was born in Havana and his family of five tried to escape Cuba, but only four made it out. Fontava has put together a list of the atrocities Fidel Castro and his communist buddies committed, both during the Cuban Revolution and after they took power in the country –

    Fidel Castro shattered — through mass-executions, mass-jailings, mass larceny and exile — virtually every family on the island of Cuba. Many opponents of the Castro regime qualify as the longest-suffering political prisoners in modern history, having suffered prison camps, forced labor and torture chambers for a period three times as long in Fidel Castro’s Gulag as Alexander Solzhenitsyn suffered in Stalin’s Gulag.

    That means that Castro was actually worse than Joseph Stalin in terms of how long his political prisoners were punished. Pretty sure nobody’s praising Stalin as a super-swell guy (and if they are, they need to be punched in the face. Repeatedly).

    Oh, and you think Muslim terrorists were the first to film their torture and murders of people they hated? Nope. Seems like that was favorite pastime of Castro as well –

    Fidel Castro and Che Guevara beat ISIS to the game by over half a century. As early as January 1959 they were filming their murders for the media-shock value.

    Fidel Castro also came closest of anyone in history to (wantonly) starting a worldwide nuclear war.

    In the above process Fidel Castro converted a highly-civilized nation with a higher standard of living than much of Europe and swamped with immigrants into a slum/sewer ravaged by tropical diseases and with the highest suicide rate in the Western hemisphere.
    Gee – if Cuba’s so great, why are people killing themselves, rather than live in such a place?

    This one really got to me, especially since I’ve only ever known Cuba as this third-world hellhole. Especially the stat about their immigration before Castro got his grimy mitts on the country. That just boggles my mind –

    Over TWENTY TIMES as many people (and counting) have died trying to escape Castro’s Cuba as died trying to escape East Germany. Yet prior to Castroism Cuba received more immigrants per-capita than almost any nation on earth—more than the U.S. did including the Ellis Island years, in fact.

    And the left wonders why Cuban-Americans in Little Havana were partying it up when news of Castro’s death became public –
    http://www.chicksontheright.com

  27. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    All you need to know about the greed, envy, hatred and jealousy that lives in the heart of white people, when black people have wealth and riches.

    Check it out Bushman….the same stinking tricks Bizzy tried on Bajans, making them believe that Barbados is not a black majority country, while he is using the theft of their black identies and sleazily implementing his, Cow, Bjerkham and Maloney’s clean out of NIS and treasury, stealing all Bajan’s money.

    If the idiots in parliament used to read their histiry, instead of Shakespeare and a ton of other shit, they woukd learn all about white wickedness, they would not now be out hundreds of millions of dollars because of their own greed, corruption and lack of knowledge,…jackasses

    “She Had a Dark Connection to Creek Indians

    Sarah Rector was born and raised on a Creek Indian plantation on March 3, 1902, in present-day Oklahoma. Her parents, Joseph and Rose Rector, were descendants of Africans who were enslaved by the Creek. A treaty signed between the U.S. and the Indians emancipated the enslaved people and they became known as “Creek Freedmen.”

    Her Land Was Thought to be Worthless

    In the agreement, Creek and their former slaves were allotted a plot of land. Rector and her family were each given rock-infested ground, which made farming difficult. It was originally thought to be completely worthless but later churned out 2,500 barrels of oil each day through Oklahoma’s Cushing-Drumright Field

    She Made a Fortune Before Her Teen Years

    Rector went from earning pennies to making $15,000 a month. She was only 12 years old at that time. Her 160 acres of land were valued at $556.50. When the oil was discovered and extracted, Rector earned $300 per day. She eventually earned $3 million for her interests, becoming the first black female millionaire in Kansas City. That money allowed her to enroll at Tuskegee Institute.

    White Men Wanted Her to Be White by Law

    Once Rector’s identity was revealed, many people wanted her hand in marriage. That included four white men who lived in Germany. Other people asked her for help in the form of loans, money and gifts. White Americans were so upset that a young Black girl had wealth that they attempted to have Rector be considered white by law. The effort failed.

    A White Man Was Her Guardian

    Many other wealthy African-Americans had their wealth removed by white guardians. The newspapers of the 1920s provided coverage of the same schemes Rector faced as white men wanted to gain control of her estate. Once the young girl grew wealthy, a white man named T.J. Porter became her guardian due to a law that sought to control Black wealth.

    She Was Wealthy From More Than Just Oil

    By age 18, Rector was in charge of her own estate. She owned stocks and bonds, a boarding house and bakery, and the Busy Bee Café and Hotel in Muskogee, Oklahoma. She also owned 2,000 acres of prime river bottomland. She would later own a small farm outside of Kansas City, Missouri as well. Rector was now a millionaire.

    She Bought a Mansion at Age 2o

    The Rector family faced claims of mismanagement and living in bad conditions. But it was not all true. The family moved from a modern five-bedroom cottage in Oklahoma to Rector Mansion in Kansas City, Missouri in 1921. Rector paid $20,000 cash for a brick-and-stone mansion in the Black district at 12th and Euclid Avenue in the city.

    The Teen Millionaire Lived Extravagantly

    Rector married her first husband, Kenneth Campbell, at 18 when she earned an estimated $11 million. They had three sons – Kenneth Jr., Leonard and Clarence. The mother bought a limousine and hired a chauffeur to drop off her kids off at elementary school. She also owned Cadillacs and Lincolns that rested on her small farm. When stopped for speeding, Rector avoided tickets by asking, “Do you know who I am?” Rector also bought European gowns and jewelry.

    Rector hosted many celebrities of the 1900s at her mansion. Stars like Duke Ellington, Joe Lewis, Jack Johnson and Count Basie visited the young millionaire at her home. The wealthy Black female would throw lavish parties at the home, which still stands today. It is currently abandoned, but at one point after Rector’s death it was converted into a funeral home.

  28. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    http://bit.ly/2nYiMbT

    Black people in Barbados need to know their history and stop being the bitches of minority thieves.

    Ya notice I did not say white, because outside of Barbados, both Cow and Bizzy would be thought of as black men with really bad skin.


  29. Bushie,
    Yes the ones with flaws were left in Africa! hahaha Just kidding. but U did leave the openning.

  30. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    http://african-nativeamerican.blogspot.com/2010/04/remembering-sarah-rector-creek.html

    …..know the evil perpetrated on your people and still being used today against you to make the lives of minorities wealthy and comfortable.


  31. WW,
    Be careful how you focus on some while the other s carry way nufty.

    All races got dem bad apples FACT!


  32. Have witnessed it all before. Now we sit back and have to suffer the same tired arguments. This is what you intened anyway.

  33. David Comissiong Avatar
    David Comissiong

    Dear Barbados Underground community,

    I would just like to draw to your attention that when I sent out this post to BU I simultaneously sent it out to ALL of the print and electronic media houses of Barbados, and to the best of my knowledge none of them has published it.

    Truly amazing that they would find space to publish all sorts of trivial stories about entertainment shows and so-called local celebrity gatherings , but would not give space to a Barbadian statement about a critical issue of international importance.

    DAVID COMISSIONG


  34. Here is one of the stories carried in Barbados Today:
    https://www.barbadostoday.bb/2017/04/08/mortgage-and-vehicle-loans-fair/

    The traditional media is all about making money and navel gazing.

  35. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    The pretend media outlets and journalists in Barbados are shallow, self-serving and only interested in who else the just as shallow, self-serving government ministers can help them rob and victimize so it can be kept a secret…..that is the limit to their intellects, dont get me started on barbadostoday and that Peter Harris….he better pray that i do not get the ammunition I been patiently waiting for.

  36. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    MoneyB…ya know I dont go after one without the other, I dont have a discriminatory bone in my body, am an equal opportunity exposer, but ya gotta admit those jackasses in parliament really over did the shit this time though.

  37. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    Bushie

    Chuckle…..I understand.

    ….you have great difficulty responding to cogent arguments or even understanding things not sanctioned by BBE.

    …..one thing I have always said to you is that any of your pronouncements must have a base in order for you to extrapolate form,they must have a grounding in something firm/tangible.

    ……When you pluck whispish clouds out of the sky,do not expect a response of worth……you and Zoe have a lot in common.


  38. David,
    We have hinted at this issue before, but the story carried in Barbados Today, in fact a marketing promotional piece, is a symptom of a failure of regulation.
    It is the job of the regulator to intervene in the market and stop such toxic lending; without being a bore, it is what is called in economic theory contingent valuation, what people are prepared to pay for a better or worse environment; or what Veblen called conspicuous consumption.
    It is such sub-prime lending that led to the 2008 financial banking crisis, yet the banks arrogantly continue to give us more of the same. They are gangsters.
    The banks and other lending institutions are just irresponsible and they know the regulator is not going to do anything about it. What is the view of the official Opposition in all this? We know the government is powerless.
    In terms of the journalism, it pains me to criticise Barbadian journalism as I know that employers are reluctant to spend any money on training.
    It is also a question of the cooperation they get from the financial institutions. In London, for example, financial journalists are encouraged to become qualified: the investment management certificate, Claritas, at the entry level, and then work their way up.
    Many former financial journalists have gone on to sit in the House of Lords, to be politicians, even chancellor of the Exchequer; they have also gone on to be professionals in the City.
    Put simply, Barbados papers are professionally (ignore the juvenile politics) poor. But the readers get what they want.

  39. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    “What is the view of the official Opposition in all this? We know the government is powerless.”

    That statement makes no sense, the government can legislate, implement and enforce the rule of law, therein lies their POWER…that is why they are elected and in which lies their FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITIES to the population….re fraudulent insurance companies, financial intitutions, etc…read the FSC, attorney general, the DPP, the commissioner of police, the fraud squad….ALL government controlled with powers vested under the constitution. ….and controlled by government ministers.

    So if the government is “powerless” what does that make the opposiion who only sits on the sidelines, waiting their turn to be “powerless” too, holdig no such available constitutional powers and if entangled re incestuous connection to the culprits read Mia Mottley and the 4 seasons scam..,,,….I need say no more.


  40. @Hal

    A simple answer, it is the culture of the country and market. The removal of the minimum savings rate and the enormous windfall the banks have enjoyed which will result in increase pressure on forex reserves should give you insight. The negligible increase in GDP growth is largely a result in commercial banking activity. Go figure.


  41. David,

    Continuing sub-prime mortgage and auto-vehicle lending in the current economic climate is a failure of regulation. It has nothing to do with the culture of the country or country. But if Barbadians want to pretend it is to do with the weather, or just having a single Sunday in a week, let hem do so. In the meantime, the real world continues.


  42. @Hal

    Wouldn’t the culture feed the kind of regulation we have and its lack of enforcement?

  43. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ Brother Comissiong
    Thanks for your response. While we may differ
    I respect your opinion and position.

  44. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    WW&C

    Why should the opposition say anything more??

    They have no power.

    They have spoken in and out of parliament,they are speaking to the people one on one, as well as publishing their covenant which has been circulated and appearing on social media.

    At this stage of the impending tsunami,the only ones that can act are the people.

  45. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Vincent…..Many of us fail to realize that POWER is given to elected governments by the PEOPLE as designed by the constitution. ..so when I hear Hal talking about a “powerless” government and an opposition whom he thinks has active power…it sounds like an anomaly.

    As things stand a power shift which can only be undertaken by the people….is imminent.

  46. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    WW&C

    The people giveth and the people taketh away…..blessed be the name of the people……..


  47. David,
    It depends on how you define ‘culture’. Culture has a popular but ill-defined interpretation ie food, music, etc; it also has a definite sociological definition; and in this case can have a regulatory definition.
    Assuming that it is regulatory, although consumer spending is one of the key drivers of the economy, irresponsible sub-prime lending is not only a risk to the economy, but it can take years to recover from it.
    It is clear the foreign-owned banks are not going to stop lending, and people who clearly cannot afford to borrow are not going to stop applying for loans which is why the state in the form of the regulator should intervene – and must.
    It is based on the macro-economic principle of dependence of needs, that people consume more in order to impress people than out of need (see Veblen, Bourdieu, and JK Galbraith’s Affluent Society).
    Barbados does not have a unique consumer culture or one that is accessible only to those Barbadians living at home. We are part of a global community and must wake up and smell the coffee and stop treating half-baked nonsense as if their are serious ideas..

  48. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    The wishes of the people…..the voice of the people is paramount.

    And no evil can remain hidden forever.

    http://bit.ly/2ofKu6o


  49. @ Money B
    Bushie,
    Yes the ones with flaws were left in Africa! hahaha Just kidding. but U did leave the openning.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Touché.!!

    Good one, …but not exactly correct…
    The REALLY flawed ones are right here in Brassland…

    Can you identify another set of people who are so intent on getting themselves back into slavery… after having been given an opportunity to literally create heaven on Earth?

  50. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    This information has beenaround for a long time, greed causes deaths of innocents.

    “Could Britain have sold sarin chemicals to Assad’s regime?
    Campaigners point out that substances used to manufacture the nerve agent were exported to Damascus in the 80s

    Saturday 8 April 2017 22.46 BST First published on Saturday 8 April 2017 20.05 BST

    Evidence that the sarin nerve agent was used in the chemical attack that killed more than 80 and injured hundreds of others in Syria’s northern province of Idlib last week has triggered awkward questions for the government over the part played by the UK in the Assad regime’s development of a chemical weapons programme.

    ‘The dead were wherever you looked’: inside Syrian town after chemical attack
    Read more
    Human rights groups and arms control campaigners have highlighted the government’s own admission that in the 80s the UK exported the chemicals necessary to make sarin to the Syrian regime. The UK also sold specialist equipment after the millennium which it now appears was diverted to the chemical weapons programme.

    Allegations that the UK supplied potentially deadly chemicals to Syria were investigated by the Committees on Arms Export Controls (CAEC) which in 2013 wrote to then business secretary, Vince Cable, asking him to disclose the names of companies given licence approval between 2004 and 2012 to export to Syria chemicals that could be used to manufacture chemical weapons. Cable was criticised by the committees for refusing to disclose the names of the companies.

    Sir John Stanley, chairman of the CAEC, said: “The effect of the business secretary’s refusal to date to disclose the names of the companies is to prevent the committees from taking evidence from them. This is a serious matter both for the four select committees who constitute the CAEC and for the House of Commons as a whole. I have therefore written to the business secretary asking him to reconsider his decision.”

    Export data collected by Campaign Against the Arms Trade, which dates back to 2008, provides no evidence that any chemicals were supplied to Syria in the last nine years.

    The lifespan of a weapon is often longer than the lifespan of a government that they are sold to
    Andrew Smith, Campaign Against Arms Trade
    However, in July 2014 the then foreign secretary, William Hague, confirmed to parliament that the UK had indeed exported chemicals that “were likely to have been diverted for use in the Syrian programme”.

    Hague revealed that the exports included several hundred tonnes of the chemical dimethyl phosphite (DMP) in 1983 and a further export of several hundred tonnes in 1985; several hundred tonnes of trimethyl phosphite (TMP) in 1986; and a quantity of hydrogen fluoride (HF) in 1986 through a third country.”

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