George Brathwaite (PhD)

American Tom Daschle once said that “what we need is not more distrust and division. What we need now is acceptance.” This statement is applicable for Barbados given the heightened political rhetoric and the dismissiveness that is implied in the many utterances from governing officials. Increasingly, the Barbados society appears to be affected by a chronic failure of trust. Barbadians expect that politicians should come across as providing credible information, particularly as the national constituency relies on its institutions and elected officials for truth and facts.

Clearly, in our adversarial system of governance, finding consensus is as much a challenge as choosing wisely those persons who would eventually become elected to govern this small developing nation. It is ludicrous, for example, to hear an elected Member of Parliament suggest that citizens or groups are nuisances to development, simply because the secrecy or untenable actions of government are sometimes challenged through the court system. One can easily ask, from whom will the country seek truth and justice? It is a known fact that, at times, the government has acted ultra vires and effective recourse was only remedied through the involvement of the judiciary.

Barbadians have been experiencing a prolonged drift away from the civility that characterised the island’s internal affairs. Almost weekly, the current Democratic Labour Party (DLP) government seems at odds with one entity or another. Resolve is hardly determined by the procrastinating leadership, and the Cabinet’s arrogance often reflects intolerance to divergent views. While intolerance is not a new dimension in Barbadian society, it is the cavalier cutting down of Barbadians and groups mounting critique by Government ministers that bastardises governance on the island. Really, should the Barbadian people and the institutions that they operate through legitimate membership or association be demonised simply because an alternative view is presented?

The repetition of contemptuous behaviour by DLP spokespersons is alarming and is creating greater division in an already polarised society. The evidence is sighted in many recent episodes. For instance, the unnecessary verbal intrusion and imputations directed at union leaders in general, and certainly into the just concluded elections of the executive to serve the National Union of Public Workers (NUPW). There is the ongoing noise and scapegoating of teachers by an elected official who not too long ago, himself was forcibly defending teachers’ rights. Added to these prevarications, the business community has had a sequel of turbulence in which its inputs have hardly been taken seriously. The private sector is frequently told that it has not done enough to help Barbados despite the government has been exceptionally short on providing accurate and timely information on the state of the economy.

The ‘DLP FACTS’ mission is unlikely to reveal the truth about the things that have gone awry in Barbados. Daily, Barbadians are complaining about the dissonance happening in the economy and society. Serious crime, particularly gun violence, is setting a tone that minimises the efforts of the police and other law abiding citizens. Disrespect for authority and the church is becoming more everyday as certain political mouthpieces hypocritically look to assert a moral high-ground although many of their actions in government are collectively debased.

It is precisely that type of governance which makes for a worsening society. Fuelled by prejudices, the political rhetoric of the failed DLP regime is being exposed by many persons that are frustrated with special interests gaining favour above the many Barbadians who sacrificed during the years of no economic growth. Why should a restitution of pay fall to the political class when our public servants are forced to languish without having had a pay increase for almost a decade? Why should Barbadians still be crying out that they are ‘short of work for the past five years’ despite having the means and machinery to perform efficiently and contribute to this nation’s economy? Why should one entity surreptitiously get contracts for major government projects when a host of other contractors and businesses are left to wonder if they will even survive for another six months?

Policy-making in Barbados cannot continue to be informed by the kinds of institutional discrimination and marginalisation that have enveloped the society over the last few years. Nor can silence be the best mode of engagement when so many facts are pointing to an economy and society hurting from the lack of effective decision-making and leadership. Barbadians must find it increasingly difficult to accept the words of a government that boasts of everything seemingly positive but is quick to rubbish anything that reflects their shortcomings or incompetence.

Incidentally, it was Prime Minister Freundel Stuart who advised last year that: “We see the family put under enormous threat and pressure; our institutions, which were supposed to reinforce our attachment to the building of a society, have been operating under untold pressure as well. The school, church, family, the labour movement, our political parties; all of these reinforcing institutions have been under enormous pressure.” While Stuart may have placed “a very volatile global environment” as the causal factor, the perilous situation in Barbados equally has much to do with the increasing failures of government to innovate and address the problems in a timely manner.

In fact, growing mistrust in the society compounds the issues of governance. It is no respite for the DLP to commence a DLP FACTS mission when for far too long, the slippage was evident while the ‘sleeping giant’ rested in another phase far removed from ordinary people. Admittedly, PM Stuart is correct when he asserts that: “If you have alienated people who are not feeling a part of the dynamic that is operative around them, then your society is under threat because you cannot count on these people to rise up and defend something of which they do not feel a part.” Now is the best time for Barbadians to hear all those presenting themselves as a politics of change. Barbados needs vibrant and proactive leadership. Judging from the last nine years, the DLP disqualified itself and Barbadians can only hope the self-determined DLP FACTS do not create more distrust and division. The alienation that comes from growing distrust will hurt us all.

(Dr George C. Brathwaite is a political consultant. Email: brathwaitegc@gmail.com)

109 responses to “The George Brathwaite Column – Growing Distrust and DLP FACTS”


  1.  

     

    Dale Marshall

    28 mins ·

     

    It should not surprise Minister of the Environment, Dr. Dennis Lowe that no one believes him when he said to the journalist that he did not know if the NCC rehired 170 persons. After all, he did say to Parliament that someone put a huge expletive filled billboard on his property recently with the additional words “Fed Up”, and when the truth was revealed, it was completely different.

    Now, either the NCC hired 170 people, or it did not. Maybe they hired a smaller number, or none at all.

    Whatever the case, given the commitment of the government to give people from the retrenched pool the first chance in the event of any rehiring; given the sensitivity surrounding the retrenchment of the NCC workers and the case brought against the NCC by those workers; given the need to keep transfers of money to statutory corporations under control, one would be right to assume that the Minister would keep an eye on such matters.

    But the Minister says that he doesn’t know, and then seeks to hide behind the fact that the journalist refused to name his sources. That is a weak and transparent ploy, and should not be tolerated by the people.

    THe matter is of such public interest and significance that he should try to find out with all possible haste and let the country know if it is true or not.

    The Minister has no knowledge of large numbers of his constituents being hired at the NCC. Really?

    I wish anyone able to find employment these days well.

    But the Minister needs to own up. His denial fools no one. For him to say” I don’t know” when a telephone call

    to the NCC chairman or the General Manager, or the Human Resources Manager would give him an answer in under a minute, is an insult to our intelligence.

    Fed up!!

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

    Everyone with intelligence should be acceptimg of this, oh how sweet it is….

    https://www.barbadostoday.bb/2017/04/11/comissiong-to-file-new-motion-against-hyatt/

    What yall want to bet Hyatt already got an attachment with this article….read and weep…lol, hahaha, lol.

    Comissiong to file new motion against Hyatt
    Added by Neville Clarke on April 11, 2017.
    Saved under Local News
    4
    Political activist David Comissiong is seeking to strike another blow at the heart of the controversial Hyatt Centric Resort scheduled to be built on Lower Bay, The City.

    “The attorney-at-law, who has already secured an injunction putting the brakes on the US$100 project, will Tuesday file an interim order suspending permission to build until the court can hear the substantive matter in a hearing scheduled for May.”


  3. Statistics indicate that the developed world is getting Barbados’ best and brightest.

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/95573/brain-drain#sthash.dXedmNzl.dpuf

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

    Good….who wants to spend years at university and when you graduate with honors go work for the likes of Cow or Bizzy or some other mediocre company where managers force you into sex to keep ya jobs or you have no rights, race hatred abounds because the 2 useless governments refuse to legislate and ban sexual harassment and racism in the work place and only talk about legislating sexual harassment laws around election time as Byer-Suckoo is doing today….again.

    Who wants to study for years and then get paid unliveable wages in mediocre stroes in Swan St and Broad St…with sex and daily misery as part of the package.

    In the real world with all their problems, legislation is in place and are enforced re fairness in the work place and there are forums to expose any such crimes for litigation….unlike the banana repulic that is Barbados.


  5. I confirm that lots of lost souls were rehired. You see them “cleaning” the island.

    In other words, ZERO effort to reduce the budget deficit since 2008. TEN years lost. Barbados will devalue very soon. Question is, will we get a new peg of 1:5, 1:7 (RBC), 1:10 (Wily on BU) or a sliding scale like Jamaica and Guyana (more likely)?

    To Hants: Why should Barbadians study at foreign universities and return? There are no qualified jobs in the Deep South where you need a D.Phil. from Oxford. Tourist industry? For a maid and a greenkeeper, four years school are enough. A bureaucrat or judge? You need to have the right party connections.


  6. Some of these contributions are angry, bitter, twisted and are the rantings of the age-onset deranged.

  7. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Hal…your ignorance knows no bounds, I was not educated in Barbados and worked in corporate settings in metropolises for many years, you may want to acquaint yourself with what Bajans have been experiening for the last 5 decades, particularly the females and young people…better yet…you should try to remember why you ran from Barbados to the UK and never returned to live full time, if you have children or grandchildren, do they live and work in Barbados.

    Your pretentiousness is unattractive.


  8. The Street Lady
    Every day as I walk the street
    My eyes instinctively cast on her frailty
    Often alone on the sidewalk
    She in apparent blissful solitude
    As if invoking the Divine Mother
    Me scanning her changing face
    As she seemingly searching for answers
    A survival guide to outdoor life
    For self, friends and family
    On the city busy sidewalks
    She the icon of a passing age
    Immersed in an air of hope (12)

    At times her roaming eyes
    Would gaze at the horizon
    Distant beyond nearby passersby
    Oblivious to the many strangers
    And the colorful traffic throng
    The humming highway of busy bees
    Buzzing erratically forward
    At times like dark molasses brown
    An enigma of confusing harmony
    Echoes of the economic hub throb
    Of the sprawling Mumbai metropolis
    The city that never sleeps
    She’s detached yet very much attached (13)

    Now her eyes swoop closer to the grimy sidewalk
    With the lazy dogs and the sleeping cats
    Cooing pigeons strutting and fretting
    Intermingling with excrement piles
    Feeding on food randomly scattered
    Lining the dusty alleyways dusty
    Watch out for rough steps on stony foot paths
    People in pensive repose people perching on front ledges
    Cobwebby corners and between tall buildings
    Some with cell phones others with tablets
    Many surfing the internet and checking websites
    Reading the news or playing games
    The street lady stands solitary and skinny
    In apparent reverie on the new day dawn (14)

  9. Frustrated Businessman aka 'Nation of Laws' my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka ‘Nation of Laws’ my ass.

    Hal Austin April 11, 2017 at 9:20 AM #
    Some of these contributions are angry, bitter, twisted and are the rantings of the age-onset deranged.

    Indeed Hal. The mood of the entire country seems to be one of bitterness and misery. Not a positive outlook to be seen anywhere in the business world for sure, other than the bribe-payers who know they will get what they want. Even the man on the street is depressed to the point where issues are not even discussed.

    When people throw around phrases like ‘loss of confidence’, I often doubt they know what that means. When I typed years ago that there would be no economic recovery under Fumble’s Fools I know people didn’t understand what I meant.

    The fact of the matter is that hive behaviour is very hard to change. Within months of Thompson’s death the DLP gov’t had separated into hives that did not communicate to each other or the rest of Barbados. It was obvious to anyone with half a brain that this behaviour was not conducive to team-problem-solving nor was it likely to change. It was also obvious to anyone with half a brain that confidence in the gov’t was lost and was not going to return. Effectively, this gov’t had been neutered by their own actions, private sector reaction and civil servant frustration and non-co-operation since 2011.

    It is also a fact that Barbados banks are flush with money and Bajan investors have nothing to spend it on. The gov’t budget could be balanced in 6 months if the new gov’t simply sells it’s real estate assets (Bajans will always invest in real estate) to investment funds and credit unions and then rents them back just like many other large companies in Bim have done.

    We don’t have serious problems in Bim, we just have no willingness by current leaders to solve them.

    Still, there will be no economic recovery under Fumble’s Fools.


  10. Frustrated,

    The people are angry, which is not a good omen for social peace. I agree with you that the problems can be solved with good government. This is the most incompetent and badly informed government in our history. Sadly we cannot allow this to give the Opposition a free pass. They must state their case if not the people should elect 30 independents. All they will have to do is agree a common programme.

  11. Frustrated Businessman aka 'Nation of Laws' my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka ‘Nation of Laws’ my ass.

    Hal Austin April 11, 2017 at 9:54 AM #
    Frustrated,

    Sadly we cannot allow this to give the Opposition a free pass. They must state their case if not the people should elect 30 independents. All they will have to do is agree a common programme.

    I would support 30 independents if we had a decisive and pro-active civil service but we do not.

    Most Bajans have a slave mentality: do only as told, dodge work whenever possible and take no initiative. Extra earnings do not motivate the majority of Bajans, they work for as much as they think they need for immediate necessities and go home to relax.

    In this environment there must be someone cracking the whip if we are to get anything done. We are long on talkers and short on whip-crackers.

  12. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    That whipcracking statement will make sure that no work ever gets done ever again….the whip was cracked enough DURING SLAVERY…in my experience, incentives, legislation to kill discriminatory practices by greedy, criminal minded employers, combined with better salaries works wonders for workplace morale.

    Whether figuratively speaking or not….”whipcracking” has negative connotations…Frustrated.


  13. Frustrated,
    The civil servants will do as told or be sent home. On the questions of the Bajan work ethic and attitude to paying taxes, I used to think the same. But I have seen Bajans, who had not worked for years, move to Europe and North America where they are prepared to pay city, state and federal taxes (local authority, county and national) without as much as a whisper. In London they will get out of bed at 4am to work on London Transport or do shifts on the national health for 40 years. In short, Bajans can respond if they respect the people in charge.
    Why can Sandy Lane threaten striking workers with the sack and the government cannot? There are rules to collect e bargaining.


  14. What is worrying to the BU household and should be to the wider Barbados is the justification to rehire NCC employees given the costly effort of th ERT and the national discourse that has ensued as a result. Needless to say the burgeoning deficit is the result. Then again it is al election year, probably.


  15. It is a FACT :

    That George hates Mia Mottley and just waiting for the right moment to ‘behead’ her again!

    That Edmund Hinkson hates George Payne….and George has him in the High Court!

    That Maria Agard hates Mia Mottley and has her & the BLP in Court !

  16. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Did I mention healthcare benefits, devoid of thiefing insurance companies and their executives, as another incentive coupled with actually getting back ya tax returns from government annually, is also an incentive to work….as people complain on a dailybasis in Barbados, the government do not pay tax refunds…or Vat monies to employers…who also complain bitterly…all the time, ask Adrian Loveridge..

  17. Frustrated Businessman aka 'Nation of Laws' my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka ‘Nation of Laws’ my ass.

    Hal Austin April 11, 2017 at 10:30 AM #
    Frustrated,
    . On the questions of the Bajan work ethic and attitude to paying taxes, I used to think the same. But I have seen Bajans, who had not worked for years, move to Europe and North America where they are prepared to pay city, state and federal taxes (local authority, county and national) without as much as a whisper. In London they will get out of bed at 4am to work on London Transport or do shifts on the national health for 40 years. In short, Bajans can respond if they respect the people in charge.

    I agree completely Hal but the difference between Bajans abroad and Bajans in Bim is simple: CONSEQUENCES. LIfe in this country is sweet with numerous social nets. Life in the real ‘do or die’ world is quite another matter. Bajans complaining about joblessness have not given up their celphones and ‘brandname gear’.

    And yes, some of us are capable of sterling effort and service; if that weren’t the case the rest would have had no-one to sponge off of for the past umpteen years. Some managers and business owners are capable of leading (not shoving) their employees into the Fires of Hell and are responsible for taking this country forward. But that is not the norm.


  18. The BLP is too:

    Fractured
    Abominable
    Cantankerous
    Tyrannical
    Stealthy

    to be taken seriously

    Those are the ……. irrefutable FACTS….

  19. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    On an aside, bajans are not taking or utilizing social media effectively enough, if ya want change, make it happen, social media is a very powerful tool…example.

    Yesterday United Airlines bumped a 69 year old Asian man from their flight, to board their employees, they claimed, the man claimed he was a doctor trying to get to patients who needed treatment this morning, he refused to move and security manhandled him and injured him, those with cellphones on board recorded the event and posted it to facebook which went ablaze….between last night and this morning United stock is falling like a stone with everyone calling for a boycott and shutdown of the airline.

    Social media is the 21st centurie’s most powerful weapon to effect change.

    Bajans need to use it wisely and more often to get rid of their parasites.

  20. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    In saying that, if ya want to get rid of the now proven useless and incompetent government….expose them fully, whether it is a combination of independent candidates or a minority coalition government, let them know the same methods can be used to rid the people and island of them should they have it in their heads to continue the last decades of bribery and corruption for their own benefit and that of a few minority business people on the island.

    Used effectively , Fruendel the Fraud and his gang of misfits and useless yardfowls will soon become an ugly and very distant memory.

    But…people have to be serious about using social media effectively to reach that end result.


  21. Hmmmm……….

    The brainy peeps left Bim,leaving behind a poor rakey lot who do not have to work as life is sweet here due to numerous social nets to fall back on, some which are competent managers and business owners.

    We have the most incompetent and badly informed govt in our history but the bajans complaining about joblessness still hold onto their cell phones and brand name gear.

    Most bajans have a slave mentality and need whip crackers but because of the same slavery whip cracking can never work again.

    well,well,well……..

    The above are the contributions of 3 people on this blog addressing how to carry Bim forward.

    I see nothing about understanding how a lack of direction impinges on the psyche of the people.

    Nothing about having a vision,selling the vision,motivating the populace to get involved in the vision in order to work towards achieving it.

  22. Frustrated Businessman aka 'Nation of Laws' my ass. Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman aka ‘Nation of Laws’ my ass.

    When Bajan ‘rags to riches’ companies like Goddards, which inspired and led the private sector for generations, are selling family jewels like money-printing rum distilleries, understand that hope for future Bajan business and confidence in our leadership is at the lowest level in history.

    Goddards chairman warned this gov’t four years ago that if they were not facilitated in various projects they would vote with their feet. It has been happening since but the press is not picking it up for what it is.

    There is no opportunity here, we are constipated by inept government and useless civil service. Time to cash out in foreign currency and invest in somewhere more progressive.

    There will be no economic recovery under Fumble’s Fools, regardless of how much Donville facetime’s what everyone else has known for eight years.

  23. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Vincent…forst ya gotta get rid of the 2 vusionless governments. ..then make the requisite adjustments….ya keep electing the same 2 visionless governments for half a century and counting…and actually believe ya can get positives outta that…dream on.

    Re-administering the whip will not change amything either….ya might get some stupid employers killed..lol


  24. @Frustrated Businessman

    You make a good point GEL. It is obvious they have been trying hard to maintain ROI and jobs in a difficult market.


  25. Some here seem to presume that an ugly man from england is some doyen

    Suggest, that his thinking is somehow important

    We have never found such

    That is a primary characteristic of the Bajan, always looking an idiot to serve.

    And yes, there are a few nobles here, but that ugly man from england aint one.


  26. We all continue to wait for the Acting Governor to deliver the first quarter review.


  27. Today George ‘Georgie Porgie’ Brathwaite continues to carry out the orders of MAM by writing some more shiiite.

    This, the calibre of political pimping one is to expect as a penniless BLP propaganda warfarism anticipates the coming elections.

    We have previously asked where does the pimping stop and the political consulting begin.

    We are minded that there is no difference. Believe the null hypothesis to be true.

    Our new questions must be, does this writer have not a modicum of courage, a thimble full of honesty. Is political pimping a viable way to mek a future living?


  28. @Hal

    “Some of these contributions are angry, bitter, twisted and are the rantings of the age-onset deranged.”

    Be CAREFUL Hal, as the saying goes “TAKES ONE TO KNOW ONE”. You must differentiate angry, bitter, twisted and rantings of the political age-onset bloggers from the rest of the sound mind critical bloggers.


  29. Wily,

    Wot? I can’t remember!

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

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/united-boss-oscar-munoz-issues-statement-apologise-horrific-incident-latest-a7679271.html

    The power of social media…

    United Airlines boss issues another statement to apologise for ‘horrific’ incident that wiped $1bn from company

    ‘I deeply apologise to the customer forcibly removed and to all the customers aboard,’ Oscar Munoz said

    Emily Shugerman New York 5 hours ago5 comments

    The Independent US
    oscar-munoz.jpg
    Oscar Munoz said he was “disturbed” by incident AP
    The chief executive of United Airlines has issued another statement to apologise to employees for the forcible removal of a passenger from one of the company’s flights this weekend.

    Video from flight 3411 from Chicago to Louisville went viral over the weekend, after fellow passengers captured the incident on their phones. The video shows a man being dragged from his seat by police, as he and other passengers protest loudly. The man later reappears in the cabin with blood on his face.

    Shares in United Airlines tumbled after the incident, wiping almost $1bn from the company’s value.”


  31. Dale

    You expect him to call anyone? He is only following his Leader who either:

    Says nothing at all
    Says he does not know


  32. Campaign start….

    “Social Care Minister hands over new home”


  33. The key to getting rid of the failing DLP government lies with encouraging the 40% of the electorate who voted with their feet last election,to abandon that course of action this time around and vote with a vengeance such that it should spell the death knell of that rotten party,that party which died a natural death in 1987 but continues to resurrect Barrow’s name in the hope that it would create magic.The latest additions to the roll don’t know Barrow,they know corrupt Lowe and Lashley who was caught with the cookie jar and their equally corrupt colleagues who should be dispatched by this time next year.
    The first item is a review of the public sector and a review of the pension benefits of parliamentarians.Imagine a parliamentarian can win a seat and serve less than 2 terms and is entitled to a pension at taxpayers expense.Madness.Everyone else must work at least 50 years to qualify.


  34. Like the many ads we see and hear on Radio and TV, which unashamedly, target children, knowing that the parents / guardians /relatives of these children may be pressurised , we now see in some Christ Church constituencies a concerted effort to overhaul , and add additional equipment in kiddies play parks in Wotton and Gall Hill, which for the last umpteen years have been badly neglected.
    The incumbents are gearing up for a general election, and the guy is not even asking the residents of those areas to “gimme a five or ten spot.”


  35. @ David April 11, 2017 at 2:43 PM #

    We all continue to wait for the Acting Governor to deliver the first quarter review.
    ………………………………

    The figures probably do not look so good……….major adjustments to suit the talking points?

  36. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    @Hal. The immigrant factor, minority status, and unfamiliarity are just some of factors that make people who migrate to other countries become relatively successful. It’s like self-preservation or social darwinism at work here. Familiarity breeds contempt.


  37. Fortyacres,

    The sociology of immigration is more complex than that. But yo are right in part. The first generation, no matter their education and qualifications, are often prepared to undergo missed opportunities in order that their children should do much better in the new Jerusalem.
    By the way, the children of immigrants can be very dangerous: Sarkozy, Trump, Hitler (Austrian), and numerous others. It is a problem we are all familiar with here in the UK with second generation Barbadians (there is also a lesson here for tourism officials). These children often try to be more native than the traditional natives.
    It is also part of the ignorance of calling people like Bjerkham and the other New Barbadians more Barbadian than the traditional Barbadians.
    I will give another example: back in the 1960s the Maltese had a reputation as criminals, mainly pimps, and they were effectively barred from working in the UK civil service. Something that race relations legislation would rule out now.
    But the Maltese kept their heads down, worked as cleaners and other low level jobs, while sending their children to fee-paying schools and university; now we have doctors, lawyers and judges of Maltese extraction. By the next generation no one would remember what the collective reputation of Maltese was.
    Or take Caribbean people. In the 1960s there were signs advertising accommodation stating “No dogs, no blacks, no Irish”. That is not a myth, I actually saw some of those sigs in North West London.
    The result was that West Indians went out and attempted to buy their own homes, mainly in the rundown areas. As the years go by, these are now some of the most expensive real estate in Britain and those people, now old and retired, find themselves sitting on expensive property in Notting Hill, Kensal Rise, etc.
    Communities can also regress. The Caribbean community is a good example again.

  38. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/95614/widow-queries-pension-cut

    How many other senior citizen’s pensions are these government thieves cutting.

    ELSA COTTLE WANTS ANSWERS about a cut in her pension.

    Since January her bimonthly pension dropped from $310 to $290 without explanation, even though she has been complaining to the National Insurance Scheme (NIS).

    The 68-year-old said she was instructed to cash the cheques and the difference would be sent to her, but four months on, that has not happened. Cottle questioned why after working for all her adult life, she would only receive a pension of between $580 and $620 each month.

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

    When small government ministers have a curse and only know how to extort or beg for bribes.

    “News from the Caribbean: Wednesday April 12, 2017

    Guyana minister allegedly sought GY$20 million bribe
    Published on April 12, 2017 Email To Friend Print Version

    oilandgas_training.jpg

    By David Gajadar

    GEORGETOWN, Guyana — An international oil and gas consultant who operates an Oil and Gas Academy in Guyana has named several individuals who are affiliated with a local training institution and a senior government official at the ministry of natural resources and the environment as the alleged masterminds behind a covert effort to close down his oil consultancy operations there.

    Michael Boer, a former research analyst at British Petroleum (BP), one of the leading oil and gas producing companies in the world, and the managing partner of the Oil and Gas Academy in Guyana and Curacao, has alleged that a senior functionary at the ministry of natural resources had demanded at least GY$20 million (US$98,000) from him late last year to exclusively operate an oil and gas school in Guyana.”

  40. Vincent Haynes Avatar

    “News from the Caribbean: Wednesday April 12, 2017

    Guyana minister allegedly sought GY$20 million bribe
    Published on April 12, 2017 Email To Friend Print Version

    Chuckle…..what does one expect from 3rd world poor boys where GYD1M=$5K at least in Bim the conversion factor would mean a lot more.

  41. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    “The two officials also discussed the introduction of plea bargaining to reduce the backlog of cases in Barbados’ judicial system;”

    Isn’t it a shame it’s Canadian officials have to introduce the idea of plea bargaining to Adriel Nitwit Dimwit the attprney general who should have known, because he is being paud a salary and as all lawyers know, plea bargaining reduces backlogs in the court system.

    The commonsense idea is to get the cases out of court and off the court calendar, making room for other cases, lessening case loads, but as with everything else, someone white and foreign always have to tell the dummies of parliament what to do and how to do it.

    Same with the personal injury cases choking the court system, the court has the power to firce settlements abd get those cases out the system.

    50 years and over a thousand lawyers later, many of whom were government ministers, prime ministers, attorneys general and chief justices and not one of them introduced legislation for plea bargaining…what a waste of taxpayer’s money on their education.

    See more at: http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/95622/ag-gay-people-persecuted-barbados#sthash.QFUZQ8t3.dpuf


  42. Mia Mottley tragedy or death march


  43. Angela

    We will see election of the Michael Carrington issue is dead or not. Almost certainly Michael Carrington is a goner, he knows it, the DLP knows it, the BLP knows it and the DLP knows that the BLP knows it.


  44. Owens mistake is he left the party and there ain’t any way back for him. He is also a goner.


  45. @ Own Area

    According to information received, Carrington has found himself in trouble again. This time he with-held funds of a company that has the matter in court.

    If this information is true, perhaps it should be mentioned at the next DLP’s FACTS conference.

  46. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Art….it is true, the info has been around for a few weeks.


  47. You are such a bloody liar. Your dead a.ss need to be hauled into court for slander.
    Boy i wish you would pull that kinda of sh.it on me .you would hate the day you were born u ole wicked low life demonic hag


  48. You know that the DLP is on the run, when its yardfowls begin to loose their rag,and are frothing at the mouth.


  49. @Artax April 12, 2017 at 7:33 PM #

    MERCEDES – THE BEST OR NOTHING

    Please understand that maintaining a Mercedes C class is quite expensive for Carrington. Tax, insurance, repair and service for a 5-10 year old Mercedes with a small engine 2 l. are approx. 15,000-20,000 BBD per year – provided, you have no major fault at engine or gear which could warp the bill up to 100,000 BBD, thanks to the genius import duties. If Carrington´s Mercedes has a big 3 l engine, the bill might be higher …

    Maybe the said client should have provided him a new Mercedes plus a service contract for 10 years – problem solved.


  50. WW&C

    If the accusations are true, then a proactive media should be investigating and bring to matter to the public’s attention.

    But it seems the media is only interested in hasting to a deceased victim’s house to interview his/her relatives for full coverage on page 2.

    Or listing the antecedents of John Browne from New Orleans, Deacons Road or the Pine.

    BTW, Angela Skeete like she got de devil in she, yuh………… she behaving like a “wicked low life demonic hag.”

    @ Tron

    Perhaps he should buy a Suzuki Ciaz…….. it would be much cheaper to maintain.

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