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George C. Brathwaite (PhD)

Given the manifested ineptitude of the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) over the past decade, Barbadians are hoping for change with the next general elections in sight. Barbadians are ready to overcome the DLP’s wreckage of economy and society. They have become excited about the prospects of different leadership and political agency. New political entities without showing their faces, coupled with a unified opposition in Parliament, are sounding their voices if not totally revealing policy alternatives.

But why be critical or dent aspirations of the Freundel Stuart-led administration seeking a third term? The answer is straightforward. The current DLP administration has failed to meet most expectations of the Barbadian people – both young and old for nearly 10 years. On hindsight, this ill-directed route taken by the DLP was erroneously self-labelled – ‘Pathways to Progress’. Barbadians witnessed a daily and unending trek towards macroeconomic degradation and societal disorder, despite DLP supporters remaining staunch in support. Moreover, the DLP has been at pains to suggest that the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) operated in ‘times of plenty’ with no profound transformations occurring under Prime Minister Owen Arthur.

The DLP claims that the inherited social institutions were unable to improve the welfare of the Barbados nation. Unfortunately, the DLP’s rejection of everything touched by Arthur, hastened the eventual failures of the DLP’s two terms in office. The sullied approach of overly separating economic practicalities from societal order became the DLP’s way of telling Barbadians that Arthur’s BLP was so focussed on economy, that a clear majority of the nation’s people and society were neglected. The distortions, untruths, and DLP propaganda have been since exposed.

Driving the first term of the DLP’s return to power since the dark days of exile in the early 1990s, the DLP chose a mantra that ‘Barbados is not only an economy; it is a society’. This easy turn of phrase managed to set a lingual framework of optimism and empowering expectations throughout the nation. Initially, Barbadians were captured by the DLP’s messaging that suggested the David Thompson Cabinet was interested in building a sound Barbadian society and transforming the lives of many persons left on the margins. However, persons more knowledgeable than the DLP’s escape artists realised that the DLP was somewhat bereft in terms of economic thought. To suggest that the DLP was capable of moving Barbados beyond the bifurcated and disjointed gaze of messieurs Thompson, Stuart, Sinckler and elders in the background, was politically enthralling but realistically empty.

The fact is, the DLP since 2008 refused to accept from the outset that ‘‘progress’’ implies the combination of social progress alongside the pursuit of economic growth. With a burdensome 2008 budget that has since been followed with fiscal indiscipline, there are challenges coping with more taxation and austerity. The DLP has not been successful creating incentives and prosperity, nor is the course set to direct the economy to meet and maximise on those benefits for meeting human needs, improving efficiency, creating jobs, and building wealth among the Barbadian people. Several experts outside the scope of the DLP warned of the potential dangers associated with oddly separating economy and society beyond analytical practicality.

From Thompson to Sinckler, and from Thompson to Stuart, Barbados was presented with good-sounding empty vessels as if societal concerns could be addressed without the apt supporting economic inputs of fiscal and monetary policies. One ought not to lay all the blame on Stuart after the passing of David Thompson. It is true that in 2009, Thompson constantly was lamenting that the DLP inherited a ‘bad hand’, with the same chorus being sung by his Ministers. This weak posturing by the DLP continues to date, and is clearly self-defeating. The DLP’s protruding leadership ineptness – discounting those constraints produced by recession – made it impossible to safeguard a society without the necessary supports that flow from a viable economy.

Clearly, Thompson’s first budget began a taxation binge. Afterwards, with Christopher Sinckler as the current pilot, taxation has practically become a runaway and non-stop train. Sinckler’s economic/financial shortcomings are part of the mix now ruining Barbados, and if there is any doubt, Minister Dr David Estwick has admitted that Barbados’ “debt metrics have deteriorated significantly since 2010,” and this timeline coincides with Sinckler’s elevation to be the Minister of Finance. Still today, many persons may prefer to overlook a predictive statement made by David Thompson in August 2009. Thompson, perhaps for the first time, conceded that: “We are navigating an uncharted path. No one knows what lies beyond the bend. In fact, we have not yet even seen the bend.” Arguably, Thompson was aware of the lack of acumen to draw on exclusively from within the DLP.

Since then, back-peddling has become synonymous with the DLP regarding the Barbados economy, and have been cause for Barbadians’ frustration and demand for change. Months ago, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) stereotypically mentioned that a ‘corner’ was within reach; Barbadians have not yet seen the bend mentioned by Thompson or the IMF. Barbadians are still waiting given that 2 % economic growth during the height of the 2016/17 tourism season, is nothing to inspire confidence in the economy. Furthermore, the printing of money continues while several advisors are indicating that depleted foreign reserves are a constant threat. Certainly, the DLP’s ‘Continuing on the Pathways to Progress’ of 2013 is conclusively disastrous. The DLP, with every limp attempt, has missed opportunities to effectively transform the Barbados nation ‘to meet the needs of the people’.

By 2014 for instance, working Barbadians were faced with ‘surprising’ job cuts and being kicked to the unemployment curb by the DLP. At the same time, young Barbadians were facing shrinking opportunities for equal access to tertiary education while having to fork out thousands of dollars to meet their tuition costs at the University of the West Indies. Other public services like sanitation, health, water, and transportation all suffered immensely. Indeed, by 2015 and despite all the ‘corrective measures’ introduced by the two Ministers of Finance since 2008, Christopher Sinckler was stating that “there is now a serious structural decline in our revenue base which we can no longer afford to ignore.” The evidence tells that Stuart/Sinckler’s repeated answer to problems impacting on Barbados, and carried on from Thompson, promoted political theatrics and imposed greater forms of taxation and hardships on the backs of Barbadians.

Under Stuart’s stewardship, near total silence has become the norm, and his supposed decency is upended by instinctive procrastination. The characteristics further demonstrate a stubborn inclination to be indecisive with important affairs. Wait and see approaches, cluttered by historical retrieval of the archaic and mundane, have been the main features of PM Stuart’s serendipitous stewardship. These factors also reveal the DLP’s paralysis in government. The DLP continues wading from one crisis to another without any clear signs of success with the constant borrowing to support government’s ineffective programmes. The verdict is that the collective expectations of Barbadians have not drawn satisfactory attention from Stuart’s uninspiring Cabinet, despite the current and penultimate desperation to spread DLP FACTS. The DLP’s verbiage is no more than half-hearted fictional pieces. Whether one focusses on the economy or the society, the pretty talk of shaping a budding society has lost its potency with all the mishaps and omissions to act by Freundel Stuart’s DLP and his struggling Cabinet.

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


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116 responses to “The George Brathwaite Column – DLP FACTS and Failed Leadership”

  1. CUP/BFP.Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZI Avatar
    CUP/BFP.Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZI

    Both the DLP and BLP and the DBLP government are dead, All other Parties new and old must take power from these group of crooks,

    The People must wake up for both are the same with the same lack of rule book,
    The People need to vote for anyone but this group for other can not do any worse dealing with the truth,

    We worry about 2 older spies looking to infect All other parties, As none was awoken before 2013, We all will win as a Nations to remove them no matter who take office,

    Rule of Law, Clear Title History of Land will get some of that 24 Billion out of the banks and the moving the Nation forward. Barbados do not need the IMF we need Truth,
    And until CB can wake up to the truth of the Matter, stay Clearof them, they still have December of 2017 to wake up, Barbados do not need a back up for the DBLP government,

    CUP/ Bajan Free Party

  2. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    The chicken and egg conundrum.

    Was society created first to ensure an economy? Or was the economy created to ensure a society ?
    This is one of these puzzling mantras that make good party rally cries but signifies nothing.

    The important lesson to be learnt from” the years of plenty” was the constant need to adjust the economy to deliver those social goods which the society demands. It is the quality of life which GOB has to deliver consistently. It is about process. There must be an iterative movement between politics and economics. The international economic and political environment are givens and the public and private sectors must always look for opportunities in these environments to exploit in order to maintain the standard of living to which the citizenry has become accustomed.

    The political parties must convince the Electorate that they are capable of delivering this kind of leadership. The budget may not be an election Budget but the response of the Opposition must be an election response. I sincerely hope this is what is being prepared by the Opposition. For the opposition, what is in the Budget is an irrelevancy.


  3. @Bernard

    How so the conundrum? How can one (society) exist witout the other (economy)?

  4. Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law! Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law!

    Your column suggests many levels of intent, cabinet conspiracy and incorrect decision making on the part of Fumble’s Fools.

    I disagree entirely.

    Outside the realm of fantasy novels and documentaries, conspiracies are virtually impossible to pull off; humans are too un-like minded and fundamentally disagreeable.

    Our catastrophe of governance over the past 9 years is due mostly to a very few simple human facts:

    Thompson and the majority of his lawyer and bureaucratic class have no practical management or implementation skills whatsoever. It wouldn’t matter what endeavour they attempted, they would have failed.
    Leadership comes from the front. Even bad commanders were followed over-the-top 101 years ago on the Somme, despite the obvious fate of the waves that followed the first. Thompson and his chosen successor Fool couldn’t lead sheep back to their night pen with a pan of molasses.
    The first two failings delivered the killing blow: civil services running without authority, bred from either skills or leadership ability, failed to facilitate. The civil servants are still waiting to be managed.
    Those three conditions created a ‘gun-shy’ government. Every cabinet minister is holed-up under his desk wondering what to do next.
    And to add to all of that, the reputation for corruption destroyed any chance of making even the slightest developmental progress with the few private-sector investors who were willing to work with Fools.

    There was never any chance of economic recovery under Fumble’s Fools, they still don’t have a clue what caused the problem. This cane-ground economy needs overseers on horses in our midst. We were lucky to have three of the best the Caribbean ever produced: Dippa, Tom and Owen.

  5. Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law! Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law!

    David May 16, 2017 at 10:50 AM #
    @Bernard

    How so the conundrum? How can one (society) exist witout the other (economy)?

    It is a Red Herring.

    Our economy didn’t tank because we were paying to provide social services.

    Our economy tanked because we treated statutory corporation spending and civil service employment AS A SOCIAL SERVICE!!!

    And we’ve been pissing away tax-payers’ money for decades because of it.

    The number are manageable without the statutory corporation money pits and civil-service over-employment.

    The social problem then becomes: what do we do with the unemployables?

  6. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @ David at 10 :50 AM

    Precisely the point I am trying to make. There is a symbiosis one cannot have an economy without a society and vice versa. To attempt to separate them even intellectually was idiotic. But the phrase sounded good.

  7. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    Frustrated Businessman @ 10 : 53 AM

    Last paragraph cannot be denied. They were focused, communicative and took on board reasonable advice. They lead from in front.


  8. In hindsight the mistake the BLP made was their inability to counter with a compelling emotional tag. Sadly though we lack quality members in the political class these days. Our best minds do not want to participate in politics. WhatWhat will this translate to?


  9. BU recalls when Thompson gained office he called a meeting at Sherbourne Conference Center as it then was and warned statutory heads invited that their performance would be measured and action taken. Many years later these government agencies continue to underperform -have a read of the AG reports.

  10. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    Sorry. Last sentence of the last paragraph’. I do not speak to the antecedent sentences.

  11. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    Under Stuart’s stewardship, near total silence has become the norm, and his supposed decency is upended by instinctive procrastination. The characteristics further demonstrate a stubborn inclination to be indecisive with important affairs. Wait and see approaches, cluttered by historical retrieval of the archaic and mundane, have been the main features of PM Stuart’s serendipitous stewardship.
    ………………………………………………………………………………………..

    First we have to understand the leadership style he has been practising and I posit that it falls between the two below.

    ………..The democratic leadership style consists of the leader sharing the decision-making abilities with group members by promoting the interests of the group members and by practicing social equality.

    ………….The laissez-faire leadership style is where all the rights and power to make decisions is fully given to the worker.

    Both styles depend heavily on an intelligent and competent members of the group.

    This is where collective responsibility of the cabinet comes into play and as the majority of the decisions have been non productive,one must conclude that Stuart cannot be held solely responsible other than for picking the style leadership which again I would say is of a societal nature rather than one of choice..Note Sandiford was similar, but did try to change it with disastrous results for himself.

    Those leaders that were touted above were accustomed to autocratic leadership.

  12. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @ David at 11 : 55 AM

    It takes a lot of courage these days to take a position different from the mainstream. We have improved the access to higher education but we have reduced the avenues to character building and high moral values. We have become too competitive and less cooperative. We have refused to instill in the young that they must work to achieve excellence.

    One of the issues missed by most commentators on the future direction of education is to deemphasise the training for leadership and taking of responsibility. At the older secondary schools in my day leadership training was part of the ethos of the school.

    But David you must do some mentoring of the young. They are ready to learn.

  13. Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law! Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law!

    Bernard Codrington. May 16, 2017 at 11:54 AM #
    Frustrated Businessman @ 10 : 53 AM

    Last paragraph cannot be denied. They were focused, communicative and took on board reasonable advice. They lead from in front.

    Exactly. Leadership must inspire confidence and loyalty by deed, not demand it by thought and word; it is confidence and consequential loyalty that makes management possible.

    You cannot push a rope.

  14. Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law! Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law!

    Vincent Haynes May 16, 2017 at 12:33 PM #
    Under Stuart’s stewardship, ………………………………………………………………………………..

    First we have to understand the leadership style he has been practising and I posit that it falls between the two below.

    Bullshit.

    Hiding from staff (cabinet) and customers (citizens) is not a leadership style, it is leadership avoidance.

    Occasionally poking your head out of your office to talk down to someone does not make you a leader, it makes you an ineffective dictator.


  15. It seems distasteful to be discussing what is leadership in the context of who are participating in the political sphere. What we have substituting is upmanship.

  16. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @ Vincent Haynes at 12 :33 PM

    There must be an element of autocracy in leadership so long as the leadership acts within the law and political convention. These leaders would have lead their parties to victory. Invariably it is the leadership that wins the election for the party. The electorate selects the PM . The Parliamentary Group and the GG merely rubber stamp the decisions of the electorate.

  17. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    https://www.barbadostoday.bb/2017/05/16/butch-mum-on-pending-sandals-sale/

    If this become ps a reality, the dummies of parliament gave away decades of concessions to whomever buys the majority shares in Sanadals…..idiots.

    “Butch mum on pending Sandals sale
    Added by Marlon Madden on May 16, 2017.
    Saved under Business
    4
    Founder and Chairman of the internationally acclaimed Sandals and Beaches Resorts Gordon Butch Stewart is not about to disclose how a possible sale of majority stake in his Sandals Resorts International (SRI) could affect pending construction of the long awaited Beaches Resort in Barbados.

    Last week, the London headquartered international news agency, Reuters, citing sources, reported that Sandals had hired investment bank Deutsche Bank AG to explore several options, including the sale of majority stake in the company.

    That report also said the company could be worth well over $1 billion, including debt.

    Sandals has since issued a one-paragraph statement to the Financial Gleaner in Jamaica, neither confirming nor denying the reports.”

  18. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    Frustrated Businessman at 12 :44 PM

    I do not think that Vincent and you are too far apart in your evaluations. Vincent is trying to intellectualize the comparative styles of leadership as sensitively as possible. Sensitivity is still part of our Bajan culture.


  19. @Bernard

    Disagree somewhat. Yes autocracy is a required trait of a leader BUT a good leader will never appear to be autocratic to those in his or or charge.

  20. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    Bernard

    An effective leader has to be a pragmatist,he needs to be aware of the various leadership styles and know when to change from one to another.

    What we presently have is a leader through no fault of his own has been brought up to be between democratic and laissez-faire both of which are inefectual in Bim as our much hailed triumvirate have shown.

    The last election saw the collective functioning to deliver the vote,they were so surprised by the win, that they never functioned since.

    Frustrated

    You have just described the laissez-fair one.

    All I am doing with this exercise is showing the type of leadership being practised and its unfortunate end result for Bim.


  21. @Vincent

    You are being generous to describe Stuart as a leader. Circumstances have conspired to catapult him as PM only because there is nobody of the stature to challenge and to remove a sitting calls for craft. There lies our problem.

  22. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    Well Well and consequences at 1 : 01 PM

    Thanks for sharing. But B U Household was expecting this , sooner or later. In previous submissions Bush Tea , David and probably yourself alluded to the fact that it is the short term profit motive that is driving the current manifestation of the Capitalist System. That is one of the reasons I am not too harsh with the Political Class because” what you see is not necessarily what you are getting”. It is usually a game of “one upmanship”. One has to watch and see how the Capitalist system is evolving.

    David ,your concern for the quality of the persons offering themselves for public office is justified.

  23. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    David

    I agree with you….but…..

    Everybody has the ability to be a leader……..one can be positive or negative.

  24. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Bernard…the same can be said for the Hyatt scam.

  25. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Is this Peter Harris who is desperate for devaluation. Some are saying he is also behind the Bitcoin scam.

    Why not devalue?
    Added by Barbados Today on May 16, 2017.

    Saved under Column
    0
    The US dollar is wildly overvalued, and our Central Bank’s stubborn adherence to a 2:1 US dollar parity is going to stall all our attempts at economic recovery in Barbados. It is nothing short of folly to have our dollar fixed to the world reserve currency.

    The uncontrollable global hoarding of US dollars will keep pushing its value higher and higher. Our US dollar-denominated labour and tourism prices are obviously going to be artificially inflated, making us no longer competitive even for American investors and travellers – and making Barbados an exorbitantly expensive destination for European, Canadian and Caribbean visitors.

    It is hard to believe that we are not even discussing currency adjustment as a policy option when all but a few sovereign states in the world have reacted to the US dollar’s unabating overvaluation and let their currencies float downward against it or devalued rather than maintain parity and loose competitiveness. Dr. Honohan’s Ireland not the least.

    People have come to associate a government-induced devaluation with a loss of prestige – a policy prescription that augurs rising food import costs, less money to travel with, skyrocketing fuel costs . . . but even if there will be some degree of inflation “because Barbados is a net importer” – the fact is that unless we do something to restore our export industries’ competitiveness, we will never get out of the straitjackets of debt and deficits and certainly never return to being the net “exporter”. It is time for all Barbadians to apply some self-discipline in our consumption habits, and devaluation will enforce this in ways that can be more sparing on fixed income earners in the community.

    The Pound Sterling is the oldest surviving currency in the world. In 1940, the pound was converted at US$ 4.03 to the Pound. Over the years, the Bank of England has adjusted the Pound’s convertibility to take advantage of the country’s development opportunities and devalued the Pound to US$2.80 in 1949, to US$2.40 in 1967 and since October 2016 has been floating for about US$1.25.

    Due to the continuing economic and political unrest following Brexit, further depreciation can be expected. The fall of the Pound against the US dollar since Brexit means that a holiday in Barbados will cost a British visitor at least 25% more than it cost last year!

    Money is a “good” just like any other good – it has its usefulness as a fairly predictable store of value that people can use to trade with instead of them having to swap goods and services between each other to get what they need. But a purchaser has to have enough of the specific currency that the vendor will accept for an exchange to be satisfactory to both parties.

    We wouldn’t want to be paid any Algerian dinars in Barbados in exchange for a two-week hotel stay unless we were in the market to use Algerian currency to purchase a product from Algeria . . . . even if they offered a bucketful of dinars, we could only use it as a door-stop!! To facilitate trade therefore, both contracting parties have to find a commodity that the buyer has and the vendor wants.

    To solve this potentially intractable barrier to global trade, a United Nations conference was held in 1944 at Bretton Woods in the United States at which the world’s sovereign states, agreed that in the absence of any other convertible commodity, the United States dollar should be accepted as the world’s reserve currency. All member countries in the world at that time admitted to having trading or investment interests in America and were already holding a stock of US dollars or wanted to hold a stock for future business.

    This would be recognized as the start of a process that could hopefully lead to the ideal of a single global currency. Since Bretton Woods however, the number of sovereign nations in the world has grown from 67 to 193, and each newborn state has insisted on having its own symbols of sovereignty including the control of their own currencies, and so the best alternative exchange rate system to a global currency was for each currency to establish its own level of convertibility against the US dollar.

    The trouble is that under this arrangement, every country in the world is endeavouring to have a large reserve of US dollars as a “cover”, and the scarcer the supply of this financial commodity, the more its price is inflated.

    The coming austerity programme is going to be painful and long. We can avoid the second punishment if we adjust the Barbados dollar to suit the dynamics of our economy. Fiscal measures will also be necessary, but they will have more space in which to be effective. We will fall forward.

    inShare
    0

  26. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    WW&C

    To devalue or not to devalue is no longer in our hands by the end of June or before we shall know which road we will be travelling one dictated by the default on our international debt or the one we have been avoiding heading to the IMF.

    This bunch can dipsy doodle all they want but a devaluation looks inevitable…….they should join the EC currency and save a lot of headache…..but we shall see where hard ears will carry us.

  27. CUP/BFP.Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZI Avatar
    CUP/BFP.Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZI

    If Barbados is peg to the USD? at 2 to 1 or western union, today is $1.9937 bds to the USD.

    I see the as a range, for each Trillion to the US debt goes went from 19 trillion to 20 trillion in months and now President Trump sign off for another 1Trillion taking the USA to 21 Trillion, with an interest rate of .5 trillion. and the Barbados still at 2 to 1 the Barbados dollar seem to be strong, But weak inside of Barbados, the Best place to change your money is at the banks or the street but buying power is down, At the rate Barbados can put 84 billion in debt before the rate change. We are pegged to the US as they to go bankrupt sometime in 2017, hype or not to the math if we are pegged, The US went up 1 Trillion and we went up $.4 Billion bds or $.2 billion USD$.

  28. CUP/BFP.Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZI Avatar
    CUP/BFP.Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZI

    Bernard Codrington. May 16, 2017 at 1:32 PM #
    Vincent Haynes May 16, 2017 at 4:58 PM #
    Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law! May 16, 2017 at 12:47 PM
    George Brathwaite@

    All of your action is like blind men, DLP and BLP and All Ministers and Lawyers are running a PONZI, LAND FRAUD. if any of you agree with what happen to CLICO then you have to know, All of you wake up 7 years late and now typing and acting like you know the Problems of Barbados, You have full blooded crooks running the Nations and you all are long talking and long typing, Doing the same as the DBLP government, This election time people want and needs answers, When the CUP/BFP get going come out and have all you question answers with proof come and read first hand,

    Check with Any Bank in Barbados and seek the amount of Bank loans for houses, just that alone will tell you Barbados can not work nor run on 1 loan every 6 months,How many took out loans to build, Return National running to Florida from NY and not back to Barbados, too many crooks and yes i warning them and showing them , They already know there is no rule of law and once money leave your hands there is no return of funds on any level from the crooks of the court,

    CHAIRMAN OF FIRST CARE health care compnay Grafton Marshall is a crook and his case seems to be dead in the courts 2009 and he is running the same FRAUD game from 2008

    Bajan Free Party

  29. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    over the last couple of months reading the nation tabloid news paper or listening to call in programmes I couldn’t help but notice the impressions that was being created by BLP candidates, members, operatives,supporters, apologist, propogandist,hench men/women,yard fowls,union leaders, journalist,columnists, writers,moderators and callers. Creating impressions( false impressions ).

    For example I heard a moderator carrying on on a programme about Dr David Estwick and he was saying I don’t want to hear nothing about Dr Estwick he had all the time to declare his hands and to distance himself from the DLP and the nonsense they are doing and he didn’t so he just as guilty as them; now any uninformed persons listening to his ranting would have gotten the impression that this DLP Government have been involved with corrupt,unethical,immoral, vile and scandalous behaviour cause he aint mentioned what it was he was talking about so people could follow.

    I also saw an article in the paper which read “No – roof Stadium” if you’re one of those readers who only look at headlines without reading the content of the story you would get the impression that the Government is planning to build a stadium without a roof and nothing could be further from the truth. Saw sometime ago “Stand firm Khaleel” Khaleel being the young Queens College Student who spoke on the BLP’S platform during one of they many marches again one would get the impression that this young fella was being attacked, victimised,tormented,bullied,intimidated etc by the Government cause that’s the impression that was given when you read the contents of the story, and again nothing could be further from the truth. I don’t know of any Government MPs, candidates, etc who attacked,bullied,harass,intimidate etc this young man.

    I heard unions leaders accusing the Government of trying to privatise this or that,accusing them of trying to stop people from joining unions,even heard the BSTU leader allegedly accusing the Government/Minister/Ministry of education and or the Boards of Management of firing teachers with out due process or willy nilly. Accusing the MOE and Govt of not listening to the unions and ignoring the plight of teachers by not engaging them. I am certain the Minister/Ministry or Boards of Management wouldn’t fire/dismiss/expel(led) suspend etc staff without reasonable excuse.

    What we are hearing is the union leader’s side, now we all know that stories have more than one side and I am sure there is more to these stories than meets the eyes or ears. How many teachers were fired/expel/dismiss or suspended? This seems very strange that if it’s more than one,cause the impression is being given that teachers are being fired left,right and center without due process etc and I sure if a teacher or teachers was fired or suspended there had/ have to be a reason(s) why such action was taken, civil servants are not fired willy nilly and sit down and keep it so quiet union or union not I know bajan civil servants and that kind of thing would have made it on all medias by now and would’ve been headed to the law courts, especially with the passage of the recently passed employment rights bill. One teacher doesn’t constitute teachers and if a teacher isn’t fulfilling his/her responsibilities and or obligations and maybe was repeatedly warned then when the hammer comes down whose fault is it? If a teacher or anybody else was working on a contract and it expires but wasn’t renewed whether Government/private sector they aren’t obligated to renew contracts. As I said we’re hearing just the union’s side let’s hear from the Ministry’s side, cause as I stated I sure there is a valid reason(s) for such action(s).

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

    “This bunch can dipsy doodle all they want but a devaluation looks inevitable…….they should join the EC currency and save a lot of headache…..but we shall see where hard ears will carry us.”

    Vincent that’s an option.


  31. @ Carson C. Cadogan

    I’m forced to remind you of your response to: “Dismiss Barbados’ Ambassador to the Organization of American States” as follows:

    “Carson C. Cadogan May 15, 2017 at 12:04 AM #: Nothing more than DAVID COMISSIONG garbage. I wasted two seconds of my life reading this rubbish. It makes no sense at all.”

    To your contribution re: “Carson C. Cadogan May 16, 2017 at 7:53 PM #,” I SHARE SIMILAR SENTIMENTS.

    “Nothing more than (the USUAL) CARSON C. CADOGAN garbage. I wasted two seconds of my life reading this rubbish. It makes no sense at all.”


  32. @ David

    Sorry for the inconvenience, but my contribution is missing again.

    I will close my wordpress account.

  33. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    https://www.barbadostoday.bb/2017/05/16/dlps-fate-sealed/

    Lol

    DLP’s fate sealed
    Pundits already calling Barbados’ election

    Added by Sandy Deane on May 16, 2017.
    Saved under Politics
    4
    The writing is definitely on the wall for the ruling Democratic Labour Party (DLP).

    So said two local pundits, on the heels of last week’s humiliating general election defeat suffered by incumbent Prime Minister Perry Christie and his Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) at the hands of the Hubert Minnis-led Free National Movement in The Bahamas.

    In what commentators have described as the heaviest defeat recorded by a governing party in The Bahamas in recent times, the PLP was only able to secure five of the 39 seats at stake, with Christie and other senior government ministers losing their seats as the PLP was booted out after serving just one term in office.

    Political scientist Peter Wickham cautioned Tuesday that while the outcome was notable, “each regional election should be taken on its merit”.

    Therefore, he was not prepared to make the assumption that “because there was a change in one country, there will be a change in another”.

    “I think it is best to look at things on their own merit,” he stressed.”

  34. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Ha, ha, ha….

    “Judge not!
    DLP has gays and lesbians too, warns Inniss

    Added by Marlon Madden on May 16, 2017.
    Saved under Politics
    4
    A stinging rebuke has come for Minister of the Environment Dr Denis Lowe from one of his own Cabinet colleagues.

    Outspoken Government minister Donville Inniss Tuesday sought to deal frontally with the whole question of morality and need for greater societal tolerance, as he joined with critics in outrightly rejecting Lowe’s latest remarks on same-sex union.

    In an interview with Barbados TODAY, Inniss also warned his ruling Democratic Labour Party (DLP) colleague to stop playing the homosexual card against the Mia Mottley-led Barbados Labour Party (BLP), since the Freundel Stuart-led ruling DLP was made up of gays and lesbians too”

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

    Dies the idiot Kellman understand what conflict of interest means……we all know what violation of citizens’ right mean though…clown.

    “Kellman defends ‘enemies of the state’ comment
    Added by Colville Mounsey on May 16, 2017.
    Saved under Housing, Local News
    4
    The legal fraternity is being accused of conflict of interest in its criticism of Minister of Housing Denis Kellman in connection with the Hyatt Centric controversy.

    Kellman Tuesday lashed out at the Bar Association, which had earlier strongly criticized the minister, who had recently described those opposed to the hotel project on Bay Street, The City as enemies of the state.

    The legal body also defended the rights of attorney-at-law David Comissiong to challenge Government’s decision to grant permission for the construction of the US$100 property.

    However, Kellman told Barbados TODAY he found it in poor taste that the association would come out in defence of one of its own against someone who was not a lawyer.

    In any event, the Member of Parliament for St Lucy said, he never made any such accusation against Comissiong, and it really was the media that had spread such untruths about him.

    “That is a conflict of interest, they are supporting a lawyer against a non-lawyer. That is their interpretation, and as I said before I never called anybody name. This is a legal matter and they are strengthening my case and they have now joined the newspapers in accusing me of something I did not do,” Kellman insisted.”


  36. Kellman is a kant……

  37. Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law! Avatar
    Frustrated Businessman: enact Facilitation Martial Law!

    Vincent Haynes May 16, 2017 at 4:58 PM #
    WW&C

    To devalue or not to devalue is no longer in our hands by the end of June or before we shall know which road we will be travelling one dictated by the default on our international debt or the one we have been avoiding heading to the IMF.

    This bunch can dipsy doodle all they want but a devaluation looks inevitable…….they should join the EC currency and save a lot of headache…..but we shall see where hard ears will carry us.

    At this point, joining EC at 1:1 would not only be the least painful option but it would save millions on Central Bank operations when it closes and prevent any future gov’t printing of money.

    Better still would be the re-adoption of Sterling but HM bight not want to have us back.

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

    No one wants HM BLIGHT either….they are named blight for a reason, as in colonial blight.

    Time to decolonize.

    But the EC option is spot on.

  39. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    One of the things that seem to be a hallmark of the crooked Barbados Labour Party is their short memories.

    In the run up to the 2013 elections, 2011-2012, they failed to remember that all across the Caribbean Govts. were falling like nine pins. The crooked Barbados Labour Party were elelated at what was going on. Up and down Barbados they were telling all who would listen that this was a harbinger for what would take place in Barbados come 2013.

    Elections were held in Barbados and the crooked Barbados Labour Party were returned to where they rightfully belonged, that is the opposition benches much to their chagrin. THE DEMOCRATIC LABOUR PARTY WAS THE ONLY POLITICAL PARTY to be returned to office bucking a political trend in the Caribbean. Govts. were changed in Jamaica, St. Lucia, Bermuda, Bahamas, Antigua, and on and on.

    Now these same parties which the crooked Barbados Labour Party praised when they were victorious have now been removed and the members and supporters of the crooked Barbados Labour Party are at it again.

    To them THIS MEANS IT IS GOING TO HAPPEN ALSO IN BARBADOS .

    I don’t have to say anything more , I REST MY CASE.

  40. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    BTW, the good , morally upright people of Barbados will never ever elect a party where the leader is a LESBIAN.

  41. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    Making a LESBIAN PM of Barbados would stick in the crow of Bajans.

  42. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    sorry should be “”craw of””

  43. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Ah cant wait for Mia to expose yall corruption Carson…all of it.

    I will look at her in a completely different light.

  44. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    “”If President Barrack Obama wants me to allow marriage for same sex couples in my country (Zimbabwe), he must come here so that I can marry him first.””

    ROBERT MUGABE

  45. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    RUNNING SCARED DAVID?

    REMOVING MY COMMENTS, ARE YOU?

  46. Carson C. Cadogan Avatar
    Carson C. Cadogan

    it wont change anything.

    the BLP and its leader wont know what hits them pretty soon.


  47. You jackasses come on BU with your salacious BS but complain when Naked Departure and others on social media do the same. Has BU posted about the child out of wedlock Lowe has from the girl in St. Andrew? Have we posted about a very prominent minister of government who travels with his outside woman on overseas trips? What about the other minister who had a fling with a girl who is now dead. Are these moral issues?

    Be care which tail you pull, it could be yours.

    #JA


  48. When the 2018 election campaign formally begins and questions of morality are the focus of attention, I hope the BLP asks John Griffiths to speak on their platform.

  49. angela Skeete Avatar

    For one Dennis Lowe spoke a truth that most barbadians would agree . Never mind Innis always barking like a mexican chihuahua at every and anything little thing that cross its path.

  50. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    David

    Hahahaha…..look how easy it was for you to chase the yard fowl……he who is without sin should cast the first stone……wuhloss.

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