Introduction

Elton ‘Elombe’ Mottley

As we celebrated our 50th Anniversary, the question came to my mind about where will we be in the next 50 years? Even tho I ask myself this question, I am not expecting that my imagination can provide you with concrete images of what that culture will be. I don’t intend to even try, but what I would like to do is offer you a framework of ideas to consider.

Barbados is an island of 166 square miles sitting in the middle of a sea with our nearest neighbour 100 miles away. We are not on the beaten path. Any one coming to Barbados has to have a purpose. Can we create a purpose or several purposes to make it worth the while for people from wherever to step off that beaten path and fly or sail to Barbados? When they do, how can we persuade them to pay us for that privilege? What do we as Bajans have that has the power to make Barbados such a desirable destination?

Let us look at what we have that we think are unique:

  • Our beaches. Not at all unique. Everybody got beaches. But if they come our beaches are a bonus not a reason.
  • Our weather. Not unique either. Everybody got weather. But if they come our weather is a bonus not a reason.
  • Our environment. Not unique either. Everybody got environment, some with rivers, trees, pristine agricultural lands, golf courses. But if they come our pristine environment is a bonus not a reason.
  • Our people. Not unique either. Everybody got people. But if they come we must be the reason not a bonus.

What do we have that would create the reason and desire for visitors to step off the beaten track?

There was a time when cricket attracted the world because of the quality of our cricketers. In 1966, we had 10 players in the West Indies Test Team. We played cricket between houses, on raw ground, and on hillsides where the umpire had to tell the batsman that the bowler was coming up. The game has changed but have we changed? Partially. Franklyn Stevenson is showing one way it is done with his cricket school.

In order to survive as an independent country, we must sell the world

  • The pleasure of knowledge, health, caring, happiness and blissfulness by creating a desire for non Bajans to want to remain or go and come back again, and again. We will rent them that time to be with us. That rental is a combination of accommodation, food, transportation, entertainment and service. We must be the landlords.
  • Barbados as the center of education and health across the internet to the world – websites mastering social media as businesses to sell Barbados as the center of Education. ( e.g. Airbnb)

Barbados must develop the reputation across the Caribbean as having the best education and health systems in the Caribbean. If it isn’t so, let us make it so. Our goal is to market Barbados as BARBADOSThe CENTER for EDUCATION in the Americas.

EDUCATION INDUSTRY

BARBADOS – The CENTER for EDUCATION

UNIVERITIES

Our goal should be to have 10-15 Universities based in Barbados by 2025. A major part of this number should be Medical, Law, and Religious Universities.

MEDICAL SCHOOLS

  • When the new hospital is built, it will continue to have a relationship with UWI – Cave Hill.
  • The Old (60 year) Queen Elizabeth Hospital should be leased to one of the Medical Schools to be refurbished and used as a teaching hospital and school.
  • The Old General Hospital on Jemmott’s Lane should also be leased to another Medical School.
  • St Joseph Hospital in St Peter should also be leased to another Medical School.
  • The Psychiatric Hospital (Jenkins, Black Rock) occupies 25 acres and can also be leased to a Medical School. Modern Psychiatric centres should be established for psychiatric patients across the island. Alternately, this facility because of its location could be used as the location for the new National General Hospital with enough space to expand the UWI Medical School (Including nursing). UWI would most likely to get accreditation, a very important status for Caribbean Medical Schools – technicians, veterinary medicine, pharmaceutics, medical sciences, etc.

RELIGIOUS COLLEGES

  • Codrington College (600+ acres) should be developed into the Barbados International Spiritual University. It has already expanded as a University of Christian Thought by training members of other Christian churches.
  • Inviting the Chinese to establish and build a Confucius Institute to teach Chinese religions and philosophical thought and language.(Already being built at UWI- Cave Hill Campus.)
  • Inviting the Japanese/South Korea similarly establish a Buddhist, Zen, South Asian Religious College.
  • Inviting Saudis and Iranians to build Islamic Colleges.
  • Invite the International Jewish community to build a Centre for Jewish Studies especially recognizing the first Jewish Synagogue in the Americas in Bridgetown.
  • Inviting India to construct a Hindu College as well as other Indian religions.
  • Invite Nigeria and other African States to build an African Religions Centre to study African traditional religions and religious thought.

BARBADOS UNIVERSITY

1. COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Extended training in the Fine Arts –

o Animation

o Art

o Design

o Music

o Dance

o Theatre

o Film Production

o Fashion

o Web design

o Critical analysis

· Accounting

· Management

· Project Management

· Other traditional areas

SAMUEL JACKMAN PRESCOD POLYTECHNIC

  • Extended training of Craftsmen in joinery and reproduction of Bajan furniture for export.
  • All students in wood-working stream would be required to individually or as teams reproduce a piece of traditional furniture, or sets in order to graduate.
  • Training of wide range of technical graduates in maintenance and construction.
  • Medical technologists and maintenance of highly sophisticated technologies.

ERDISTON TEACHERS COLLEGE

  • Training is use of new technologies
  • Training how to use of proverbs to establish values

PRIVATE HIGH SCHOOLS FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS

Barbados has had a number of private secondary schools for over 70 years viz.

The Barbados Academy, The Modern High School, The Federal High School, Mapp’s High School, St Winnifred’s High School, St Cyprian’s, (Green) Lynch’s Secondary, St Ursula’s Secondary, The Co-operative High School, Seventh Day Adventist High School, Callender’s High School, Metropolitan High School, Christ Church High School, and Codrington High School.

  • Barbados should encourage the use of many of the old plantation estates to establish private accredited high schools with or without boarding for local and foreign students to pursue the International Baccalaureate (IB) program.
  • Provide access to foreign students thru accredited schools, especially South and Central American students to access our High Schools so as to be immersed in English while boarding at former South Coast hotels converted into hostels.

SPORTS AND LIFE STYLE INSTITUTES

  • Education opportunities – coaching in sports, health farms, health spas and related rehabilitation services to develop talents of Bajans
  • Develop support services such as volunteers for the development of Sports in Primary, Secondary and National meetings.
  • UWI and its Institutes must conduct research aimed at encouraging new businesses that can be developed on the internet, in marketing of our music, artistic and cultural industries outlining the types of jobs and services required and existing Worldwide. This would include festivals that could hire our artistes to perform as professionals during the summer and fall. We need to capitalize on the Rhianna Effect.
  • Barbadians should also be encouraged to develop and practice the art of Sticklicking and Road Tennis.

HERITAGE

HERITAGE AND GENERAL NATIONAL EDUCATION

  • To strengthen the moral authority and respect for people, Barbadian students should be taught proverbs as training tools from preschool to the end of their secondary schooling.
  • NIFCA – the platform for exposing our youth to the arts, should emphasize its developmental role by establishing competition first at all primary schools where other students, teachers, family and friends could see their children’s works.
  • The winners in each category will go to the Parish level where they compete again and the winners next to the National Level. This process would also allow parents and friends to once again follow the children’s work and successes at all levels.
  • The finals would consist of those winners from the Parish level.
  • Parents and teachers would be encouraged to be judges alongside National judges who in their deliberations would raise the knowledge base of the parents, friends and the community at large thru the discussions.
  • The establishment of a series of voluntary National Orchestras and choirs to perform in public regularly at the National Bandstands – The Hastings Rocks, The Bay Street Esplanade, Queen’s Park, George V Park, Speightstown Esplanade and other areas. The purpose is to re-develop a solid heritage of musicians to enhance the quality of life in Barbados. We did it all before with Church Choirs and Village Choirs.

LANDSHIP

One of the critical requirements for Bajans is the need to strengthen our own self-awareness and self-esteem of what and who is a Bajan. The Barbados Landship Movement is unique to Barbados and gives us the singular identity second to none. The survival of the Landship Movement must be part of our National Identity. Without it we have a face without a nose.

The only country that has a Landship Movement is Barbados. Landship for adults will die out because most of the communal conditions e.g. savings and burial benefits have been replaced by National Insurance and individual insurance. This unique Bajan indigenous institution should not be allowed to die. It must be recreated and reimaged as an organization in Primary Schools to inculcate several traditional values from the Original Landship plus. We had no qualms of introducing Boy Schools, Girl Guides, Church Lad Brigades, Mother Unions and Cadet Corps because it was mandated by the British Government. All of these organizations required discipline, cooperation, and development of leadership skills

The Landship Movement should be converted into a youth movement like the Boy Scouts or Girl Guides or cadets to maintain this unique aspect of Bajan Culture. These youth Landships would become crucibles of this traditional dance and its musical heritage. Competitions with each other in a series of categories will be organized annually.

The former Barbados National Bank, now Republic Bank, had developed a business program for students that can be incorporated into this Landship Movement. This program can be used to teach money management and savings culture.

CARTS CULTURE

Over the years, Bajans developed a series of carts to move goods and provide services to each other. When compared with Caribbean Islands, the Bajan carts are unique in their design and use. Some of these carts should be adapted and used to provide modern day services while maintaining and projecting our unique heritage. These carts can be decorated and painted to capture individuality of the vendor.

  • Donkey Cart taxis to move visitors from Cruise Ships to Bridgetown and around Resort Areas like St Lawrence Gap, Holetown and Speightstown
  • Bread Carts can be converted to serve hot or cold foods at temporary roadside locations.
  • Rumshops recreated as restaurants serving indigenous food as cuisine with appropriate training available.
  • Snowball Carts selling Bajan ices with locally made fruit juices – Bajan Cherry, Bajan shaddock, Sugar apple, Golden Apple, Packaged Sucking Cane (made from earlier soft varieties), Sea Grape, Guava, Gooseberries, et al
  • Luncheon Carts for food
  • Coconut Carts

MASTER CRAFTSMEN OF BARBADOS

Furniture

There is no doubt that furniture craftsmen/joiners of the past have produced a fantastic array of unique designs. Let us imbue that furniture with the prestige that it deserves`. The palaces/warehouses that some of this furniture is located are

  • Government House, St Michael
  • Ilaro Court, St Michael
  • The Barbados Museum, St Michael
  • Grantley Adams House –Tyrol Cot, Spooners Hill, St Michael
  • The Barbados National Trust Headquarters – Wildey Great House, St Michael
  • Keith Melville’s Sunbury Plantation House, St Phillip

There are many other collections across Barbados that can be used to earn income for the owners as well as for the country.

Training of persons to produce reproductions should follow the same path as training artistes for all types of endeavours – art, music, dance, writing, programing, etc. All Wood Working graduates should be required to reproduce a piece of this furniture in order to graduate. Do it once, do it again! On visits to these locations there are signs indicating cost of item plus shipping costs to rest of the world. Exactly what fine artists do. All art work would be signed and certified as authentic reproductions by a special Reproductions Standard Institute. Marketing will be thru Internet web sites using National ID Codes.

Why are there no tours of Government House? Or Ilaro Court?

  • Bajan Furniture galleries where signed reproductions are also marketed and sold with short histories.

· Chattel houses should be used for restaurants, boutiques especially in the growth areas of St Phillip, St John, St Peter and St Lucy.

·

Each area needs to be given prestige thru media and the internet coverage

Computing systems. Knowledge systems. Cognitive. Will still need people contact.

Pottery

Chalky Mount Barbados should be designated as a National Brand as is given to Cropover. This brand should be accessible to all potters operating out of IDC Facilities Island wide. BIDC needs to change its focus to giving full support to developing local entrepreneurs in these areas.

ATTITUDES – Service and Servitude

Actions needed to strengthen our perception of self.

National Heroes

  • A popular edition of book on National Heroes to be sold for $5-10.
  • Comic book versions of National Heroes for primary schools.
  • Cartoon video stories about National heroes.

The Bajan Experience

  • Recreate Rumshops architecturally and spatially not just in the country but in the city extended to the street. Baxter’s Rd, Nelson St, Roebuck St, Palmetto St
  • Use of Donkey cart taxis to move tourists from harbour to the Inner Bridgetown Mall (Swan St, Broad Street, Trafalgar Square, Palmetto St.)
  • Street food using traditional bread carts to serve from
  • Chattel house as hotels etc.

The Rastafarians of Temple Yard

  • Rastas have been around for the last 40 years, manufacturing products, many inbreeding designs, use of hard leather limiting their market primarily to fellow Rastas.
  • Need to develop wider designs especially to reach the visitor and middle class market.
  • Need access to better quality leathers and other products like the high quality leathers made from the Barbados Black Belly sheep skins.

Barbados Black Belly Sheep

The Barbados Black Belly Sheep is a unique animal that evolved in Barbados over time. Studies have shown that the mutton obtained from the Black Belly Sheep produces high quality Triple B (Barbados Black Belly) lamb for both the local and visitors’ market. It also produces some of the finest leather from its skins.

To support the Black Belly development program, unused agricultural lands must be converted into grass pastures and/or growing miamossi plants, also known as river tamarind (Leucaena leucocephala).

This plant exists in Barbados and has a high protein content suitable for feeding ruminants when it is still green. It was introduced by the Ministry of Agriculture in the Pine but has been allowed to grow wild to maturity scattering its seeds across neighbouring fields. Penalties must be implemented against land owners who allow their lands to become infested by those responsible for administering environmental standards.

This plant if managed correctly, will be an important feed ingredient for the Barbados Black Belly sheep. It is from these animals that we can produce –

  • Leather for leather workers (Consultant – Dr Leroy McClean) – bags, shoes, amulets, hair products, books marks, wrist bands, earrings, jackets, head bands,, etc
  • Food (Consultant – Rosemary Parkinson)
  • Reduce foreign exchange spent on importing animal feeds.

Industrial Development Corporation Services

The Industrial Development Corporation must be restructured to invest in the development of future Bajan entrepreneurs by bringing them together in one location at vastly reduced rent to allow them to feed off of each other. IDC is a landlord of buildings at the industrial Estate outside the Bridgetown Harbour. These buildings are deteriorating and are not being maintained. Certainly IDC could offer discounted rates to bring young entrepreneurs together to feed off of each other to supply services to the outside world.

  • Legal Drafting for countries, states and municipalities worldwide
  • Computer software development
  • Video and sound studios
  • Graphic artists
  • Heritage joiners
  • Clothing Designers and manufacturing
  • Animation

Bridgetown Port Duty Free Facilities

Access to duty free facilities at the port should be two-fold:

  • Wholesalers who sell to retailers.
  • Retailers who sell to visitors.

This will allow retailers to use traditional concepts of hawkers to sell products in various combinations. This tradition of bargaining and combining products allows them to determine their own profits but more importantly share in the spoils of the hospitality industry. These newly defined hawkers at the port will be costumed having acquired training at the Barbados Community College (BCC) and Barbados Institute of Management and Productivity (BIMAP).

Other Developments

  • Dr Carmichael – Restoration of Facades on Roebuck St, Swan St, Bay St etc
  • Paul Altman – Enhancement of Jewish Synagogue, oldest in the New World of the Americas.
  • Tyrol Cot Chattel House Village should be a functional village redesigned as a mini tenantry village with a bakery providing freshly baked traditional breads, rumshop, chickens, palings, bread carts, snowball carts, coconut carts, troubadours, et al.
  • Villagers should wear period costumes.

This is about US. This is about Jobs. This is about Pride. This is about Survival.

Baba Elombe Mottley
January 1, 2017.

962 responses to “The Next FIFTY YEARS of PRIDE and INDUSTRY!”

  1. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    “Invite Nigeria and other African States to build an African Religions Centre to study African traditional religions and religious thought.”

    That vision should focus on the Black majority population and their African history of building cities and universities, the skills and creativity used to create jobs, information should be sought from Timbuktu, not all the history was destroyed by europeans, much of it was saved on African creativity.

    Future generations will not just be interested in religion, if at all, religion is destructive, just like politics, you dont want to continue a useless society steeped in and brainwashed by religion.
    ,

    Each African country has information that can educate the majority population on what their ancestors were capable of creating, the great minds that existed then and what they themselves are capable of creating without being solely dependent on tourism…this information should be taught from primary school level to university level….that is the definition of education.


  2. Many good ideas in this BLP Manifesto

    Let’s cost it; though others are expected to; impose time limits, hard and soft; estimate revenues, social impacts, job creation potential, comparative analyses etc.

    It’s a national development plan.

    Mottley has been talking about a lot of these ideas for many decades. Some of his ideas like the black belly sheep suggestions may have legally problematic.

    How could these ideas work without an anti-corruption ushered ethos? And can either political party provide such? Maybe it is time for a national unity government. A departure from a staid polity to create a supportive environment for these radical changes.

    Some will argue that the wars of religions, especially between Sunni/Shia will be brought to the home front, others of course.


  3. At least somebody with a plan.

    However, Barbados will never recover under the current tax regime. Services and goods are 50-100 % more expensive than in other CARICOM destinations. You do not get added value in Barbados, only higher prices. Shooting, begging and low quality of services do not distinguish Barbados from any another country in the region.

    Therefore, the public service must be reduced by at least 10,000 – 15,000 workers AND appointed civil servants plus privatization or shutdown of all public corporations. Barbadians in the public service had 50 years holiday at the taxpayer´s expense. Now get to work!


  4. @Pacha

    Your comment is not constructive. You appear to dismiss Elombe’s proposals menat to stoke discussion. He has always played such a role in Barbados.


  5. I have an idea for chattel houses. Put three of them in the local museum and demolish the rest.

    They are symbols of poverty, bakwardness and suffering. Not to be celebrated.


  6. What about the crumbling geriatric hospitals? As for religious schools less is more they would only serve to foment more strife in the island and the region

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

    For decades Elombe has been useful in creating ideas, it just needs discussion to improve on those related to the African history of the over 260,000 majority black population on the island, the schools curricula which should focus solely on educating this population on the history of their ancestors as navigators, builders of empires, the greatest intellectuals from thousands of years ago, the scientists, mathematicians, artists etc…….

    .,,,the population has to be educated that Black history, African history did not begin with the slave trade or tourism.

    …the only way going forward to wipe out the negative miseducation that has produced such damaged souls who are useless to any productive, positive constructive discussions and resulted in the destruction of multiple generations of young black minds….is making African history mandatory in every school on the island.

    ..,.,something like the useless Chadster….who now possesses an old, black useless mind.


  8. Chad, not so fast! We need the huts for the many former civil servants in 2018.


  9. Chad
    Not the chattel house, but their architecture as a cultural and heritage asset. Oh gawd, the igrunce some of us spout.


  10. David

    How much more ‘constructive’ can we be?

    Do you require of us a public act of submission?

    We have long accepted his proffer/s, though not uncritically, and are now suggesting we develop a master plan, timelines etc.

    Without such we are just talking shop.

    In the final analysis, if these ideas are to be given life somebody has to put up some money, soft cost, to do the project/s development work, run a proper office, etc.

    Make no mistake, for Barbados, what is being suggested is the equivalent to the Chinese New Silk Road. These represent massive projects and a lot will have to be invested before all target clients or end use investors are brought in.


  11. Enuff

    I said, put three in a museum. Go to the museum to enjoy the architecture.


  12. Wunna people – including Elombe and Pacha… are all missing the REAL point.
    All these ideas for reconstruction and rebuilding are set on a flawed foundation of albino-centric thinking.

    It is like a fellow who has destroyed his life running behind women from Bush Hill, coming to the realisation that he MUST do something different – or face certain death…
    ….and his ‘solution’ is to try the girls from Nelson Street….

    Boss our solution DOES NOT lie in any fancy new plan for education, for new business ventures, for new housing initiatives…
    The problem that is destroying us resides in our MINDS…. much like the wutless whore-man…. and the solution, like his, is in a new mind-set.

    As Kammie Holder says so clearly in another blog, it is about the lack of ITAL, lack of ethics, lack of principle, lack of morals….. lack of RIGHTEOUSNESS.

    It DOES NOT REQUIRE any large inflow of dollars.
    It DOES NOT REQUIRE any mass firings of public servants

    …but it may well require a complete RE-THINK of the idea posited by Chad that chattel houses are beneath our level – and that we all ‘deserve’ to live in stone palaces.

    That such ostentatious concepts are at the TOP of our list of ‘must-haves’ is the ROOT of our brassbowlery.

    If we would SEEK FIRST THE SPIRITUAL VALUES OF RIGHTEOUSNESS, THEN (AND ONLY THEN) we will find that these other albino-centric shiite distractions will be added unto us.

    BTW…
    What the hell is wrong with a chattel house?
    Only someone contaminated with albino-centric poison would see it that way… and we all have been highly poisoned….
    There is no better COMMUNITY CENTRIC housing structure than a chattel house… with a big kitchen garden… and a ‘gully’ nearby where ‘hide and hoop’ can be played… 🙂

  13. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ David September 6, 2017 at 7:06 AM
    “@Pacha
    Your comment is not constructive. You appear to dismiss Elombe’s proposals menat to stoke discussion. He has always played such a role in Barbados.”

    Elombe’s wish-list is a mere reflection of his dreams of returning to the halcyon days of a more sophisticated, quieter, cleaner and a more disciplined entrepreneurial Barbados of the period 1950 to 1990.

    Unless Barbados gets back to the basics of a civilized place like keeping it clean and tidy and more orderly while being infused with a strong brew of discipline and respect for the law it has less of a chance of surviving than a snow cone in hell, given its current trajectory to the same hot destination of self-consuming social and economic implosion.

    Civilizations and nation states all have their time in the sun of brilliance and shining success. Some wither in the afternoon heat; others die before the evening sunset, others show great resilience to see another sunrise.

    Once ‘flowery’ Barbados is on the cusp of her day.


  14. Bush Tea,

    “It DOES NOT REQUIRE any large inflow of dollars.
    It DOES NOT REQUIRE any mass firings of public servants.”
    I agree with your proposition on an idealistic level to build a better society.

    The current habits, however, are very different, as you are aware.

    Need for hard currencies: Whenever Barbadians have to choose between local or CARICOM products and imported products from USA, EU or Japan, they want the latter. Example: Ketchup. People want to buy Heinz ketchup, although this ketchup is not different in taste from Ketchup from Trinidad.

    Coming to the civil service: The current work ethic is based on colonial times, when sabotaging the British masters was prudent. The civil servants never realised that Barbados is independent and that liming and bribing damages their own society and families.

    Given your proposition, the big question is: What can we do to change Barbadian minds? Does it need an external shock (as I proposed, namely devaluation and firing as many civil servants as possible) or is there any way to change their attitudes through reeducation? For example, leaders, buying local products, condemning corruption, living transparency, living in chattel houses, being first in office and last out and driving intelligent small cars, possibly with electric drive powered by solar panels on public buildings? As long as the cabinet ministers, judges, pastors, QCs and high bureaucrats celebrate the “albino-centric” lifestyle of the North, things won´t change here in Bim. The masses always try to copy their demigods.


  15. an wen de hurricane come……


  16. Figure out why Barbados survived/prospered for the 300 plus years prior to the last 50 years and you may see the future possibilities!!


  17. @ Chad9999

    what is objectionable about the traditional chattel house (of which there are very few still in use in Barbados)? The traditional chattel house is a house of peculiar design. It arose in response to a peculiar material, economic and land tenure environment. Like the meeting turn, or the tuk band, the chattel house may just be relics of a past that we romantically remember. That said, I believe the chattel house serves as an example of responding to our needs through sustainable and technologically appropriate innovations. The challenge is to maintain that capacity to think and innovate in response to new economic, social and even changing natural environments.

    I may agree that the traditional chattel house may belong in a museum, what I do disagree with is that “They are symbols of poverty, backwardness and suffering”. Not to stress the point but as an example, the large housing projects of multi story buildings that blight many urban areas are certainly associated with poverty, backwardness and suffering so much so these are the veritable symbols of the “ghetto” where dismal intractable social conditions abound.


  18. Bushie

    We don’t have to go to the inner self, the spiritual self, for every comment.

    Most times remarks are allowed to emerge from the two other ‘selfs’


  19. Today the term for the “chattel house” is the modular house!

    https://youtu.be/5xgbPo1vEWY


  20. That said, I believe the chattel house serves as an example of responding to our needs through sustainable and technologically appropriate innovations. The challenge is to maintain that capacity to think and innovate in response to new economic, social and even changing natural environments
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    There is one constant that is common during the first 300 plus years and the last 50 years.

    That is our minute size.

    The need to fit the suit to the cloth required thought!!!

    The ability to think is not so common these days although it used to be!!

    … and that may be all that separates the two eras!!


  21. @ Pacha
    We don’t have to go to the inner self, the spiritual self, for every comment.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Touché…

    @ Tron
    What can we do to change Barbadian minds?
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    We agree that this is the basic challenge. If you just shock them – but provide no proper EDUCATION as to the core problem, they will just end up in Nelson Street, so the change needs to involve a WISE change of habits.

    It has been done.
    In Uraguay, Jose Mujica gives away 90% of his salary and manages to be actually a POOR president. This sends a clear message about national priorities. Brass Bowls on the other hand, would use tenuous logic to reinstate a 10% pay cut – while holding the pay of poor workers at 2008 levels and taxing the shit out of them.

    Ecuadorian president Lenin Moreno stripped his vice president of all power as a result of bribery. It is clear what message would be sent by such actions – to public servants, judges, customs officers and garbage collectors. It is called SETTING STANDARDS.
    In Brass bowl land, we have a ‘president’ who drives around in an expensive car visiting centenarians and primary schools … while our PM advises high level crooks to ‘get a lawyer’.

    VISIONARY LEADERSHIP is the key element in societal success.
    With such a leader who can focus on the REAL values of life – such as ethics, morals, cleanliness (as Miller keeps harping) and JUSTICE, ….and who then institutes a meritocratic approach to national productivity… the results would be drastic …and swift.

    @ Hants
    an wen de hurricane come……
    +++++++++++++++++++++++
    A truly VISIONARY society may CHOOSE to build sustainable, affordable chattel houses for everyone – (even though they may be susceptible to hurricane damage every 30 years or so….but can then be rebuilt in six weeks) ….RATHER than to have stone mansions for 20% of the people… which are only susceptible to destruction every 60 years…. but which then cost a fortune and would take ten years to rebuild.

    Such a society then provides storm resistant community centres /churches / social halls /sports arenas / schools where the whole community can collective seek shelter in times of danger – while supporting each other during such perils.

    Which approach provides the better overall human developmental results…?


  22. There is scope in both the educational and health/wellness ideas.


  23. Bush Tea,

    Agreed. Leadership means setting and lifting the standards. We cannot expect Barbadians to go through austerity and change if the boys on top live in luxury sponsored by the taxpayer.


  24. Bush Tea

    Do you realize we live next door to ostentatiously wealthy Americans. How many Barbadians would settle for a “spiritual” life in a cramped and hideously ugly chattel house?


  25. Man Chad, you may be surprised yuh!!!

    Those ‘ostentatiously wealthy Americans’ are full of corrsponding complications that mostly negate the material wealth of which you boast.
    The problem for us – is that they – in seeking to fool themselves that they have succeeded – promote the glitz and glitter … while hiding up the dirty, rotted, painful side effects.
    Most stuff that glitter is not gold.

    It is dead easy to highlight those CONSEQUENCES to enlightened young people – who will, to a surprising extent, be able to put 1 and 1 together and arrive at 10.

    Your heroes are also ostentatiously unhealthy, lonely, drug-dependent, afraid, unfulfilled, guilt-ridden …and mostly ….unhappy.

    True education can be a wonderful tool Chad….and children will surprise you..

    As to the Chattel house, …well Bushie now lives in a mansion by any definition of the term, but the bushman’s TRUE memories of happiness, bliss, freedom and fun still revolves around a certain chattel house …with a big kitchen garden …and a gully nearby…. 🙂

    Hideously ugly ..??!!??
    LOL…
    Don’t mek joke…. it remains the central focus of the most beautiful memories.


  26. Ping Pong

    Our enslaved ancestors were fed pig’s feet and such. Does that mean we should maintain the disgusting, and unhealthy tradition? Ditto the chattel house. Conserve the best. Discard the rest.


  27. Dont mek joke………..Kellman is in New York addressing the UN!…………..oh shiiite……..do you think that the delegates understood anything he said?………wuhloss!

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

    The 4 strongest buildings in Sint Martin were destroyed by Irma who is a CAT5 on steroids.


  29. Not true.

    These buildings were believed to be the 4 strongest.

    Irma has proved them to be otherwise.

    The strongest buildings in St. Martin are still standing.

    Irma has shown what is excellent construction, and what is not.

    We should all learn these lessons.

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

    Simple…many buildings got demolished, including one hotel I saw, they thought those were the strongest buildings, but everything is water soaked…Irma got them one way or the next.

    Richard Branson is staying on his island to see how strong his buildings are…Irma is off the charts.


  31. Wait, John yah saying that BIM under white people rule did real good but since de locals tek ova and in full control dat things all helter skelter?

    So there was nah prosperity since den neither. Nor was there any ability to think and to cut and contrive.

    Well looka ma crosses.

    You does let your feelings shine through real sweet . Like wha we Bajans call a real Johnny.

    What a fah-qued up comparison

  32. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @John
    There is another “constant that is common during the first 300 plus years” of Bajan history. The fact that it was a penal colony populated by innocent people of mostly African descent administered by guilty guards of European descent.

    I’m not a fan of that model, but If we return to it we will make sure that this time you are in the role of prisoner.

  33. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    Elombe’s suggestions are sound strategy, but as Bush Tea points out, the sine qua non of achieving any of them is profound cultural change for Bajans. Management guru Peter Drucker said it best: “culture eats strategy for breakfast.”

    Almost all Bajans say they want change, but none of them say they want TO change.
    http://leadershipcloseup.wp.lexblogs.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/127/2014/12/Screen-Shot-2014-12-18-at-8.58.16-AM.png


  34. Of all the things Griot Elombe spoke about de fellas hereso set fire to the Chattel House. That is real cat piss and pepper.

    What is a a chattel? That answer blows in hills and fields just like how we fore-fathers did had to pick up and move de house back den. So obviously nobody building chattel houses now cause dem all building big-tail mansions to stand wha dem is for ever and a day.

    But dat don’t mean dat a current chattel house can’t look beautiful and be expanded for comfortable living or business like the elder said.

    I notice that there is a few chattel house style and fashion buildings pun dem rental sites, so that is another way to make this Bajan property most beneficial for the owner dem.

    Alot of other things Brother Elombe said are too relicky. The cultural stuff like stick licking and so on don’t really have deep marketing power and even too Road Tennis. Remember that is another sport competing for TV/social media eyes. Of course if its good as can be den it can break out of the pack.

    The tennis folks have been working on that for many years now though so new strategies needed to spring that trap.

    Was surprised that he wanted to turn over so many sites to Med Schools based on their track record but the broad idea makes much sense if elevated to get in research and training medical centers as the focus of any school.

    Lots of other ‘dated’ remarks along with provocative comments but he is a wise fellow and his brief is a mere starting point.


  35. The general feeling conveyed is that Barbados has been a failure in these past 50 years.

    All I am saying is that the previous 300 plus years Barbados did quite well!!

    So if we were serious about looking at solving the failures it would make sense to examine the successful times!!


  36. Iggy
    “Relicky” differentiates, especially if it is unique. Nothing wrong with preserving the architecture of our chattel houses. In fact, chattel villages were created for commercial purposes at Holetown and St.Lawrence Gap, and the vernacular is clearly referenced at Pelican. What about the thatch “huts” over water in places like Bora Bora that more expensive than concrete rooms? 😂


  37. @Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. September 6, 2017 at 3:13 PM #

    At least we in Bim survived Harvey – what a POSITIVE news! All hail to Godess Bim and Poseidon who protect us!

    However, the Godess and the ancient God deman a human sacrifice to keep Bim safe. What about Sinckler? 😉


  38. Dont we have enough blogs to carry the politician back and forth? Can we stretch the ideas proposed by Elombe as a more constructive exercise?

  39. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @John,
    Over the previous 300 years Barbados did NOT do at all well. It was a concentration camp surrounded by ocean run by fatted and corrupt guards. That is not “well.” The guards stole the labour of hundreds of thousands of people and exported their ill gotten wealth. The maintained their control by torture and terror. Wake up! Read the history!

  40. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    PLT….John is a parasite from the minority class who figures as long as his ilk raped the majority black population for 300 years , got away with it and enriched themselves, Barbados did well…

    ……. he is of the bottom feeder variety like those from UK who lived off the existence and labor of black people for centuries.

    In his mind Black people are still inferior and do not deserve to do well.

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

    Tron…ah think the gods got their sacrifice yesterday, but I doubt they would complain if they git a minister or two.

  42. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    …..and i would personally present myself as the lady with the whip for prisoner John and his parasitic ilk, free of charge..

    unless the majority population are taught their history, their true origins, that miseducated lot will continue to regress, with no progress.


  43. I grew up in the 1960’s.

    There was a feeling of hope, contentment and an attitude that nothing was impossible.

    Today that is gone, people are hopeless malcontents who are unable to get up and actually do anything.

    They can talk about uninformed imaginations … but no one takes them seriously.

    They are miserable!!!!

    It is a simple fact that the first 300 plus years produced the base … and the last 50 years destroyed it!!


  44. Ah wonder from which cave Elombe just emerged from ?

    Mia Mottley must be pissing herself with fright …..after Uncle Elombe lambasted her tail on VOB – some years ago – when she called the program to engage him as that program’s moderator that day .

    Even her Uncle Elombe realised that she was a WASTE long time ago !

    By the way ….. has the Nationnews responded to her call for a retraction of her ‘ Carifiasco ‘ comments ????

    A joker she is …..


  45. Even if Barbados became a society of self-employed craftsmen and street traders, we eould not be wealthy. We would be like Lebanon, Morocco or Egypt.

    Donkey carts and chattel houses do not give us the lifestyles we crave!

  46. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @John
    You poor fool. You had a feeling of “hope, contentment and an attitude that nothing was impossible” because you were a parasite who was blissfully unaware of the exploitation that made your life so comfortable while people with a different colour skin suffered. I was a child in the 60’s and remember that Black person could not get employed by a Bridgetown bank. I remember the racist arrogance of White boys far stupider than I was, trying to concoct excuses for getting worse marks than I did at school (perhaps you were one of them).

    The feeling I remember from the 60’s was anger, frustration and determination to kick the British empire into the gutter. The only hope and contentment was when the West Indies thrashed the English or Aussies at cricket.

    There is nothing about the past 50 years that is not better than what preceded it in Barbados: unless you are a racist.

    We rightly complain about having a few dozen murders a year now, but this pales in comparison to the hundreds each year murdered by the plantocracy, and the thousands more who died of damage, disease, despair and destitution attributable to the plantation system. The first 300 plus years was part of a crime against humanity and produced nothing but atrocity, theft, repression and lies.

    Sadly, you’re still repeating those tired old lies.

  47. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Chad99999 Actually, we have already surpassed Lebanon, Morocco and Egypt. We would be more like Portugal or Estonia.


  48. So Bushie you traded happiness for a mansion, are “rich as shiite” but just with “happy memories”. Time to downsize and regain that happiness? Or ya gine just plant a big ass kitchen garden at the mansion?


  49. peterlawrencethompson September 6, 2017 at 6:27 PM #
    @John,
    Over the previous 300 years Barbados did NOT do at all well. It was a concentration camp surrounded by ocean run by fatted and corrupt guards. That is not “well.” The guards stole the labour of hundreds of thousands of people and exported their ill gotten wealth. The maintained their control by torture and terror. Wake up! Read the history!
    ++++++++++++++++++++++

    Here is what I mean by uninformed imagination.

    Prior to the last 50 years of independence, in fact in the first 300 plus years, Bajans got up and went and helped build the Panama Canal.

    Over 20,000 plus Bajans did that.

    Multiple other thousands (tens of thousands) went to the United States through Ellis Islands to improve their lots and those of their families.

    Members of my family took that opportunity and improved themselves and those remaining here.

    Bajans went to Brazil (I got family there too and none ain’t called Millie … as far as I know) and Argentina and after the second world war, … again, prior to the last 50 years and in fact, during the first 300 plus years …. tens of thousands went to the UK (I got family there too) to provide the labour needed after the sacrifice of so many other members of the Empire to which they belonged!!

    Multiple millions of $$ were remitted to Barbados.

    Barbadians were citizens of the world and had an attitude that they could do anything anywhere in it!!

    That’s why it is often said you will find a Bajan anywhere you go in the world.

    … and even although tens of thousands left the island (only a completely uninformed idiot would claim Barbados was a concentration camp) the population grew and the numbers were replaced.

    Yes it was tough in Barbados but it was (and is) tough all over!!

    It is the poverty of spirit that exists in Bajans today is why so many are so miserable.


  50. NorthernObserver September 7, 2017 at 12:10 AM #
    So Bushie you traded happiness for a mansion, are “rich as shiite” but just with “happy memories”. Time to downsize and regain that happiness? Or ya gine just plant a big ass kitchen garden at the mansion?
    ++++++++++++++++++++

    .. and hobble about it with a wacker waiting for the Grim Reaper!!

    Un/une de les miserables!!

    Miserable in French and Miserable in Bajan …. the same thing!!

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