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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.

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


  1. I believe Eric Williams made the same argument in his Capitalism and Slavery.The abolition was more to do with the law of disminishing returns than any moral or benevolent posture of those vile and wicked capitalists.The likes of Jeff “Beauregard”(stupid name harping back to white supremacy days)Sessions and those redneck slime bag bastids found in the Southern US to this day and now called the alt-rt,fascists and KKK are in essence hanging on to the notion that white is might and white is right.I say it loud and clear wunna gone get a rude awakening this very century.Young people got too much internet access to stand for wunna foolishness.I never did and was termed rude,audacious and bumptious but briteisass and reached the top ‘o my game where I ruled nuff ‘o dem ass.


  2. If the Quakers faded out over time, which they did, clearly the subsidy could not have come from them.

    The died out, or moved to America over time, or back to England.

    Their influence was on the wane from the mid 1700’s … my estimate.

    Minutes of Quaker meetings in the 1760’s in America/England suggest they had disappeared in Jamaica and named a few remaining in Barbados.

    However some did remain into the 1800’s, eg Rowland Gibson was buried in the 1850’s.

    So it is impossible to attribute the subsidy to Quakers, each period would have to be examined separately.

    I have already said that after the destruction of the economy in Haiti in 1791, sugar prices rose by a factor of 3 and of course it would have been profitable to operate, … very very profitable.

    It would not surprise me if in this period, the love of money caused owners to act out of order.

    If you search in Schomburgk you will see a reference to Salmagundis and Pumkins … I think it refers to the character of two classes of planters, one willing to exploit the situation, the other preferring to be plain and not prone to risk.

    That increase did not last for ever … your reference to Beckles, page 192 shows prices were low in the 1840’s.

    In agriculture one year of loss can be followed by years of profit and then disaster.

    I believe that the best managers will be found in agriculture because they need to operate against a completely unpredictable foe, Nature!!

    It is probably a fact you may also find the worst ones as well.

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

    PLT..that’s exactly why I stopped reading all John’s et al …. spam like convoluted rubbish.

    They don’t get that time has passed them by and the only way forward is to clean up the currentdecades old filth before anything new can be introduced, nothing will work until the modern day slavery, the government corruption and stealing, the drugs, guns and money laundering, the crimes committed against the majority population are all dismantled…..until they chase away the stinking racists and wannabe white supremacist in the minority population who are exploiting the majority like the parasites that they are….using bribery and cirruption of government officials…

    ..only then can there be a fresh start for the population on the island…anything else is a waste of time.

    All that crap they are posting means nothing, until action is taken from within the government…and they will not take any action because they are benefitting too much from corruption, unless they are fully exposed in the international community….to interpol and others.

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

    John is a bottom feeding parasite, descended from bottom feeding parasites…all they do is look for free labor from Black people…..his Karma is total…

  5. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    The unassailable truth is that the subsidy to the sugar industry was the theft of labour from enslaved, and then cruelly exploited, people.


  6. FROM THE JAMAICA OBSERVER

    Barbadians have an inclination towards an American values system, according to the findings of a study that examined the country 50 years after it obtained political independence from Britain.
    The report on the study “Barbados At 50: The National Values Assessment 2016,” was handed over to Prime Minister Freundel Stuart on Tuesday night by the Director of the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies, Dr Don Marshall. He told the ceremony that the research suggested that there was an inclination towards an American values system.

    The study was commissioned last year during the Independence celebrations to ascertain what are some of those features of Barbadian life that citizens would wish to reclaim, retain or discard.


  7. I stopped reading Johns also….
    Think the last thing he was posting was latitude and longitude….

  8. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Exactly…that is why the minority white parasites on the island, even the wannabe Vincent is still trying to cling to the sugar subsidy, still trying to steal Black people’s labor using their begging bowls for subsidies…

    ……they have done a fine job of stealing for the last 40 years, it’s time for the governments to cut them off completely, let them sell those yachts and dozens of houses they got.

    ……all they minorities ever do is look for ways to STEAL labor and everything they could from Black people…..

  9. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    PLT…it’s criminal what they have done, it’s the true definition of modern day slavery.

    And with no conscience whatsoever..with true evil intent, they are still fighting to continue…their thefts…

    …..they should have me to deal with, I would reduce everyone of those greedy, hateful, racist bitches to paupers drinking water from the gutters of Barbados.


  10. RCA was interviewed by the stipendiary magistrates in the Apprenticeship period.

    Thome and Kimball is worth a read as it records their experiences.

    https://archive.org/details/emancipationofwe00thom

    You will see there was a range of experiences during this period.

    Here are RCA’s references to the 1816 rebellion and his son on an experience. Son may well have been my ancestor, the child of a slave!!

    His lawful son had died young in 1821.

    Could never find out what happened to his wife.

    So, here goes.

    “He (RCA) dwelt much on the trustiness and strong attachment of the negroes, where they are well treated. There were no people in the world that he would trust his property or life with sooner than negroes, provided he had the previous management of them long enough to secure their confidence.

    He stated the following fact in confirmation of this sentiment. During the memorable Insurrection of 1816, by which the neighboring parishes were dreadfully ravaged, he was suddenly called from home on military duty. After he had proceeded some distance, he recollected that he had left five thousand dollars in an open desk at home. He immediately told the fact to his slave who was with him, and sent him back to take care of it.

    He knew nothing more of his money until the rebellion was quelled, and peace restored. On returning home, the slave led him to a cocoa-nut tree near by the house, and dug up the money, which he had buried under its roots. He found the whole sum secure.

    The negro, he said, might have taken the money, and he would never have suspected him, but would have concluded that it had been, in common with other larger sums, seized upon by the insurgents.

    Colonel A. said that it was impossible for him to mistrust the negroes as a body.

    He spoke in terms of praise also of the conjugal attachment of the negroes.

    His son, a merchant, stated a fact on this subject. The wife of a negro man whom he knew, became afflicted with that loathsome disease, the leprosy. The man continued to live with her, notwithstanding the disease was universally considered contagious, and was peculiarly dreaded by the negroes.

    The man, on being asked why he lived with his wife under such circumstances, said, that he had lived with her when she was well, and he could not bear to forsake her when she was in distress.”


  11. peterlawrencethompson September 13, 2017 at 6:44 PM #
    The unassailable truth is that the subsidy to the sugar industry was the theft of labour from enslaved, and then cruelly exploited, people.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Read “The Groans of the Plantations” written 1685.

    The protest was against an increase in taxes.

    It matches costs to revenues.

  12. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ peterlawrencethompson September 13, 2017 at 5:36 PM
    “Real historians, not bumbling amateurs like John, have long since established that the slave trade, and later slavery itself, were abolished by the British only after they no longer served British interests. But as I demonstrated time after time earlier in this thread, as soon as John is confronted with the evidence that proves him wrong he changes the subject and wanders off on another White supremacist tangent. The song and dance about Quaker beneficence is simply ex post facto excuse making to cover up their guilt for being so deeply implicated in something they knew to be evil in the first place.”

    “It’s kind of like the mafia Don who donates copiously to the church to try to wash the blood off of his own hands.”

    Do you mean like that rabidly licentious sex maniac by the name of Master Elcock of the Mount Wilton plantation infamy?

    What our resident Bu twistorian, Sir John, the Chief Archivist and Master Researcher ought to tell us is if the ‘Master’ of Mount Wilton was a Quaker too.

    After all he left in his will some of the ill-gotten gains as his earthly reparations to some of his loyal un-rebellious slaves in order to buy a place in heaven but was kidnapped by the Devil on his apotheosis to the House of Bacchus with his ‘heavily-hung’ black male lover and manservant Jeffrey very close behind.

    It’s a pity that the blacks who formed the first free village (not including the many established at the homes of John’s QUAKER ancestors) had to do it with ‘blood’ money. That is where the loving caring Quakers could have made their presence felt by showing and guiding those recently freed blacks how to manage their bagatelles of real estate given to them by their contrite but dead Massa Elcock.

    No wonder the blacks in Barbados are still cursedly disenfranchised as far as economic ownership and control goes.


  13. What you really mean to say is that the short fall in money caused suffering … agree if that is what you meant


  14. … and the suffering was borne unequally


  15. I was looking for instances of places called “Exchange”

    St. Thomas, St. George, St. Peter and St. Lucy plus ….

    I seem to remember the big orange building that belonged to London Bourne by London Bourne Tower carried the name Exchange displayed prominently.

    Could this name possibly indicate a barter system existed for a time in Barbados?

    If it did and we ever had to revert to such a system how would VAT be charged?

    Professor Marshall feels Exchange in St. Thomas had more to do with a place where teams of draft animals were changed.

  16. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    John, yes “…and the suffering was borne unequally” so grossly unequally as to constitute a crime against humanity.

    The cold was bitter in the winter of 1944 at Auschwitz and with the Nazi forces loosing on all fronts there was suffering at Auschwitz, “…and the suffering was borne unequally.”

    Se now what an absolutely evil statement that is… trying to efface the existence of a monstrous crime?

  17. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    It was not that “the short fall in money caused suffering” John. The system of slavery imposed by the British caused suffering. Period.


  18. peterlawrencethompson September 13, 2017 at 5:48 PM #

    Did you…..and what was your interpretation of it?


  19. The pelau tribe – John, Chad, Vincent and Hal


  20. The cold was bitter in the winter of 1944 at Auschwitz and with the Nazi forces loosing on all fronts there was suffering at Auschwitz, “…and the suffering was borne unequally.”
    ++++++++++++++

    Dramatic.

    How many slaves were freed in the entire British Empire at emancipation?

  21. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Gazer…all frauds.

  22. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    John, 100% of the enslaved people were freed after the end of the apprenticeship system… and 100% of the surviving prisoners were freed when the Allied forces entered Auschwitz… what’s your point?

  23. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Vincent,
    Yes I skimmed it. The abstract and press coverage is somewhat misleading. In his summation the author states “Achebe cannot be recast as a supporter of colonialism, which would be a serious disservice to his views.” Duh…


  24. I didn’t ask for percentages!!

    When you find out let us know!!


  25. …….. see if you can’t get one of your buddies to help you.

  26. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    I’ve no intention of answering your question John, because it is yet another diversionary tactic for you to avoid the truth about slavery.


  27. I knew you would not want to answer … guess your buddies are struck dumb too!!

  28. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    I simply refuse your diversionary tactics John. You are transparent. The system of slavery imposed by the British caused suffering. Period.

  29. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    Everyone knows this except racists.


  30. Professor Handler’s work at Newton in the 1970’s has a problem.

    Just can’t explain what was found in the archaeological dig at Newton Plantation!!

    Its because he started with a false premise …. all the graves he excavated must be of slaves!!

    He assumed Newton Plantation always existed as it was when he did his dig …. but it didn’t.

    Most Plantations in Barbados are composites of smaller units … as is Newton.

    In fact, one of the small plantations belonged to Edward Oistine, a Quaker.

    “1669 – Edward Oistine of Christ Church gave half an acre of his land “unto the People called Quakers in this Island … for a burying place … which shall be in part before my Garden which is encompassed with Plantaine trees where I desire that I may be buried”.

    Magic word Garden!!

    So somewhere on Newton Plantation there is a Quaker Burying Ground!!

    http://www.caribbeanfamilyhistory.org/quakers/

    No doubt there are slaves buried in it but it comes as no surprise to me that he found goods of European manufacture unlike in any known grave of any New World West African descent site.

    DNA testing was not available at the time but by now it should have been resolved!!

    http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1637&context=adan

    “In the early 1970s, archaeological research in several plantations addressed a variety of issues in the sociocultural life of early Africans and their descendants in Barbados, once England’s wealthiest and most populous New World colony; this research ultimately focused on the Newton plantation slave cemetery. Over the years, the Newton research has been extensively reported, and is well known to scholars of the early African Diaspora in the Caribbean [2]. Although the 104 burials recovered from Newton represent a small percentage of the total number interred at the cemetery, there was a diverse artifactual inventory that included coffin hardware, clay pipes, pottery, metal jewelry and knives, metal and bone buttons, and many different types of glass beads. Some of these artifacts are unique to New World African descendant sites (see Handler 1997).

    This paper focuses on two virtually identical small glass objects of apparent European manufacture. Each was found associated with a different burial. Although the objects were excavated in May 1973 and published in 1978 (see Handler and Lange 1978: 119-122, 306 for more details on the objects and their burial contexts), as far as I am currently aware no similar objects have been reported from other African descendant sites.”

    Same thing happens when you start with the premise that the planters made loads of dinero!!

    You reach flawed conclusions!!

    You make yourself totally miserable and then throw a hissy fit when others don’t buy your conclusions!!


  31. Newton, Christ Church
    1659 3/313 John Kirkham of London sells to Samuel Newton of B’dos for 276,000 lbs muscovado sugar, pltn where Newton now lives, 194 ac, Christ Church, 76 slaves, 15 bondservants
    Bounders: (N) John Arnott, Thomas Johnson, dec’d, Ralph Parrott, John Barry, John Robinson, Edward Stretch, William Batler, Edward Herbert, Simon Dorsett, (S) Edward Oistine, ? Herbert, ? Butler, ? Barry, (E) Thomas Trott, John Arnott, Thomas Johnson, dec’d, John Paddock, Robert Ramsford, (W) Robert Gutridge, William Butler, John White, Edward Stretch, John Barry, Dayrells?
    (The above is probably the smaller of 2 pltns which Samuel Newton owned in Christ Church and is therefore not the main pltn)

    1663 BMHS xxiii 117 – Lucas mss – Edward Oistin sells to Capt. Samuel Newton “Guye’s Storehouse” at Oistins Bay – bounded E, W, N, (S on road)
    [remained in possession of Newton pltn till 1955]

    1673 12/42 One of a number of deeds all dated 1673
    Confirmation of title to land. Charles II by letter patent issued to Lord Willoughby, Gov. of B’dos, empowered Gov to confirm landowners’ titles to lands held. Lord Willughby has died and the Gov’s Council now legitimately assumes his powers. Council confirms the title of councilor the Hon. Samuel Newton to 400 ac, Christ Church
    Bounders: Col. John Searle (Searles), Capt. John Williams, dec’d (Balls), Christopher Carew, John Belgrave, Peter Edney, William Hargrove, George Oker, Maynards? Nathaniel Kingsland (Kingsland), Daniel Gilbert, Edward Herbert, dec’d, Walter Harte, Thomas Hayes (Bannatyne), Richard Shaw, John Niccolls, John Barry, Dayrells? Ralph Perrot, John Jones, Richard Perryman, George Shurland, John Birkett, William Blanchard

    1674 Newton (Twice)
    1680 Samuel Newton, 581 ac, Christ Church. This includes both pltns.
    1683 BMHS xiii 186/7 – Will of Samuel Newton
    1684 23/325 Barbara Newton, widow of Hon. Samuel Newton, dec’d, leases to Alexander Beale and Jeremiah Ward, both of St. Philip, for 10 years @ £1800 (?) per year the 2 pltns of her late husband
    1) 434 ac, Christ Church
    Bounders: Maj. Richard Williams (Balls), John Jones, John Adams, William Hargrove, dec’d, Nathaniel Kingsland (Kingsland), David Cockrane, Edward Herbert, Jonathan Hooper, Thomas Hayes (Bannatyne), James Mercer, John Niccolls, John Barry, Dayrells? James Oistine, Henry Straughan, George Shurland, Richard Perryman, John Birkett, John Dempster, Tobias Frere (Searles)
    2) 131 ac, Christ Church
    Bounders: Thomas Morris, Margaret Davis, Charles Collins, Searles & Trywhite, John Dempster, Edward Oistine, dec’d, Richard Oistine, dec’d, Richard Gray, dec’d (Lower Gray’s)
    At end of lease pltns must be returned under following conditions:
    180 ac dunged and planted with cane to reap
    120 ac dunged and planted with young canes
    40 ac guinea corn
    20 ac potatoes
    12 ac pumpkins and bananas
    10 ac cassava
    5 ac yams
    ? ac Indian corn and 6 week peas
    Rest of list of land and crops and list of slaves missing
    (See Newton pltn papers on microfilm as held by U.W.I. Cave Hill – Lease to Benjamin Cryer)

    1684 RB3/19/360
    (Hutt 84-07-22) – Sam Newton died
    Plantation inherited by widow, Barbara and son John
    1693 Barbara Newton, widow and John Newton, appoint Attorney for plantation at Oistins Bay known as Newtons left to them by Samuel Newton

    1694 Death of Barbara Newton
    c. 1706 Death of John Newton, succeeded by son Samuel & grandson John – 1783 (Handler 158)

    1721 Newton
    (Owned by Newton family until death of John Newton’s widow (sister? – BMHS xvi 38) c. 1790 when inherited by her 2 nephews (cousins?) John and Thomas Lane of London, England

    1740 John Newton married Elizabeth Alleyne – Brandow 19, 67
    c. 1790 Elizabeth Newton – BMHS 38:460
    1794 BMHS xvi 38–41 – Owned by Newton and Lane families – see Seawell
    1794 Acquired with Seawell by Thomas John Lane – Handler 158
    1794 Death of last Newton, Elizabeth – Inhertied by her 1st cousins John Lane, barrister and Thomas Lane, solicitor

    1803 John Lane took Seawell, Thomas took Newton (Handler 158)
    1816 Thomas Lane (Watson “Civilised Isle”, 125)
    1824 Death of both brothers
    1825 Thomas Lane
    1842–01 Richard Lane (’01 dec’d) 458
    1859 Absentee
    1879 Steam 12 HP
    1912 Executors of Mrs. E. Lane 458
    1913–21 S. Pemberton, legatee 458
    1921 Advocate 12/3/1921 – sold to E.L. Ward and H.C.G. Manning £40,000 458
    1921 Chancery Court Pemberton v Lane
    1920 30 Nov Pur.: Messrs Ward & Manning £10,000 – W.I.C.C xxxvi 1921/200
    1929–34 Ward E.L & Manning H.C. 458
    1935–37 E.L. Ward (458 in ’35) 436
    1951 Ward Brothers & Bynoe
    1957/8 Newton Ltd
    1970 Newton Ltd 300


  32. Work by Ronnie Hughes and Mr. Queree, made possible by Richard Goddard and others.


  33. “Former Peterborough MP Dean Del Mastro returned to jail in Lindsay, Ont. on Wednesday after losing a second appeal on Election Act violations, but his lawyer stated they are now considering an appeal to the Supreme Court.

    Scott Fenton, Del Mastro’s lawyer, wrote in an emailed statement that his client is “very disappointed” with the Ontario Court of Appeal’s decision.

    “We are actively considering an application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada,” he wrote.

    The appeal was heard by a panel of three judges, who came to a unanimous decision.”


  34. The very fact that the units are small scream minimal dinero!!


  35. Deltro Group gets Town Planning approval for a new plant expected to provide 200 full-time jobs.

    The Town Planning Department has given approval to Deltro Group for them to proceed with the construction of a solar panel manufacturing facility on the compound of Trans Tech at Kendal Hill, Christ Church.

    The announcement was made this morning by Chief Financial Officer of Deltro, Dean Del Mastro.

    “We are standing here today in front of the approved manufacturing site that will employ 200 full-time hardworking men and women of Barbados,” he said.

    He says there are still some details to be finalised but their plan has been signed off by the Chief Town Planner and their drawings have been officially stamped.

    Acknowledging that this has been no small feat, Del Mastro said they will continue to work towards becoming shovel ready, and will now await some logistics that must be put in place.

    The plant intends to support residential and industrial solar development in Barbados and the wider Caribbean, translating to more environmentally friendly, cost-effective solar energy options to consumers.

    The company is also expected to commence work on its 70-acre solar farm at the proposed Waterford site. Del Mastro says after all the studies, the drawings, the effort, the town hall meetings and the work by the Ministries attached to the project, Town and County Planning has recommended approval for the solar farm.

    The proposal includes a recommended 10 megawatts to be approved.

    With these two pieces in place, he said the Deltro Group is in a strong position over the coming weeks and months to move forward.

    He noted that they are continuing to work with the Ministry of Energy on their Generator’s License and that Mr. William Hinds, Chief Energy Conservation Officer, is working closely with respect to resolving and working through their application.

    Now that the approval is in place for the manufacturing facility, Del Mastro says they want to work to get their manufacturing line out of the Barbados Port and set up at Trans Tech, noting that their line has been at the Port since August 2015.


  36. @Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. September 13, 2017 at 8:39 AM “an indian dude the ringleader and known drug dealer and the 4 black idiots he hired to help him.”

    Sunil is no Indian. Lolll!!! He was born and raised here. His mother is from Mauritius, but has lived in Barbados most of her adult life. His father is Bajan to the bone.

    I don’t know though if Sunil is confused about his cultural/racial identity.


  37. @John September 13, 2017 at 4:15 PM “Collymore Rock”

    The Rock part I think is Biblical …“Christ”. Rock appears all over in Barbados.

    Rock appears all over Barbados because Barbados is a rocky coral island. There are rockstones and rock names all over.

    It has NOTHING to do with Christ.

    Your imagination is running away with you.


  38. @John September 13, 2017 at 4:22 PM “I think Sir Hilary Beckles was born in Rock Hall, St. Peter so no connection apparently to Becles Road…but a possible Quaker connection!

    Why don’t you leave Sir Hilary out of this.

    We, the African descended people, including Hilary’s grandparents and my parents, and their parents and grandparents before them and our ancestors who laboured in the fields of Rock Hall, Black Bess, Whitehall, Bawdens, Mangrove and Swans plantations, we their children and grand children and great grand children are not dead yet, although the white people tried to kill us with hard labour and low wages.

    We have not forgotten yet either

    I forbid you to call our names again.

  39. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    The young man’s funeral in the link below, sadly, highlights the structural and persistent racial segregation on the island. May he rest in peace.

    https://www.barbadostoday.bb/2017/09/13/final-wave/


  40. “Same thing happens when you start with the premise that the planters made loads of dinero!!

    You reach flawed conclusions!!

    You make yourself totally miserable and then throw a hissy fit when others don’t buy your conclusions!!”

    In your case, that flaw is, “slavery was not a heinous and despicable crime”. Hence with all the interesting and valuable information you can produce, you selectively interpret to produce your predetermined conclusion.

    We are all guilty of this at times in life. We form certain opinions over time, and whatever we take in, we prefer to select that information which we can justify concurs with those opinions.

    You can see Handler’s error clearly, but you cannot see your own.


  41. @ Simple Simon ..September 13, 2017 at 11:40 PM
    ….It has NOTHING to do with Christ.
    Your imagination is running away with you.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Well said SS..
    A ‘rock-stone’ or a ‘big-rock’ is the most common aspect of the Bajan landscape….
    Only an idiot – or a mentally deranged clown, would search out such a tenuous ‘Biblical’ connection for such names….

    The wages of sin is death… but it appears that first, the initial ‘payslips’ of the particular sin of rank racism is a seriously tormented mind….
    Poor John is collecting his just reward..

    That he now lapses into these long ‘Zoe-like’ epistles of nonsense is not at all surprising to Bushie…. PLT has so succinctly and professionally confounded and dismissed his nonsense, that even Vincent seems to be seeking a way of distancing himself from the fellow madman.

    Bushie’s only wish is that PLT not be sidetracked by this petty episode of idiocy, from his substantive mission of BB education and enlightenment.

    So far, Peter has blazed a trail of enlightenment that had become overgrown ever since Sir Cave abandoned HIS assigned mission of BBBB education and enlightenment – for the albino centric lures of Sagicor and of ‘Eddykashun on the Hill’…

    P, …DO NOT BE SIDETRACKED by a mind-damaged loser….

  42. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Talking Loud…they are the ones segregate themselves because they still believe they are superior beings and use it as a tool and weapon to be parasites on the lives of the majority population. ..on the island.

    ……they will have no one but themselves to blame when the tide turns and they cannot be parasitic anymore.

    John’s is a damaged, cursed mind, destined to serve and pay for his and his ancestor’s sins through eternity…Karma.

    Simple…I take it you have not seen a photo of Sunil’s mother…definitely indian…Mauritius is filled with them….many varieties…bear in mind, the original indian is black and African…the ones we know just like to play uppity with themselves.

    Last I heard…Del Mastro was looking fir concessions…robbery of the treasury and people as usual.


  43. 14,000,000 African youths stolen carried away to Americas

    Mothering Slaves forced to breed up to 15 children from age 13 for 20 Generations

    =
    Doing maths
    1st generation produced 105,000,000 slaves
    2nd generation produced 787,500,000 slaves

    But Slaves were culled as quick as they were bred

  44. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Simple… FYI..

    “The majority of the population are Indo-Mauritians (people of Indian descent) who make up 68% of the population. Creoles (of African descent or mixed-race) are about a quarter of the population. There are approximately 30,000 Sino-Mauritians from the Hakka and other Chinese sub-ethnic/linguistic groups.”

    I can spot an indian a thousand miles away, when I was 19 years old an indigenous native from the Caribbean told me my features were those of the oldest indians known to man, thousands of years old, the ones that travelled from Africa through the world….and populated the west,

    …..trust me I know what a real indian looks like and it’s not those silky hair crooks and pretenders yall got in Barbados…..they are bad carbon copies of what real indians look like.


  45. This Govt of buffoons effed up this island..Cackling hyenas & assorted miscreants permeate the political classs. High prices to live in a deteriorating society mismanaged by a bunch of “pompasetting” posers.. We like it so…


  46. In your case, that flaw is, “slavery was not a heinous and despicable crime”. Hence with all the interesting and valuable information you can produce, you selectively interpret to produce your predetermined conclusion.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    You aren’t reading what I am saying.

    I have already said that slavery is and was a crime against humanity

    … and I have included both Trans Atlantic and Trans Saharan slavery


  47. Simple Simon September 14, 2017 at 12:19 AM #
    @John September 13, 2017 at 4:22 PM “I think Sir Hilary Beckles was born in Rock Hall, St. Peter so no connection apparently to Becles Road…but a possible Quaker connection!
    Why don’t you leave Sir Hilary out of this.
    We, the African descended people, including Hilary’s grandparents and my parents, and their parents and grandparents before them and our ancestors who laboured in the fields of Rock Hall, Black Bess, Whitehall, Bawdens, Mangrove and Swans plantations, we their children and grand children and great grand children are not dead yet, although the white people tried to kill us with hard labour and low wages.
    We have not forgotten yet either
    I forbid you to call our names again.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++

    I am also am an African descended person …. and a European descended person … the same as Peter!!

    I also am a descendant of Native Americans, Jews and God only knows what else.

    That is what makes me a member of the human race.

    Pelau if you like!!

    So I just can’t abide by that advice!!!

    Professor Hilary Beckles and Professor Jerome Handler both have problems in their work.

    Like me, both are human.

    … and humans make mistakes!!

    Me too even though like them I try my best not to do so.

    If you examine yourself you will see there isn’t much difference between our origins!!


  48. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. September 14, 2017 at 6:48 AM #
    Simple… FYI..
    “The majority of the population are Indo-Mauritians (people of Indian descent) who make up 68% of the population. Creoles (of African descent or mixed-race) are about a quarter of the population. There are approximately 30,000 Sino-Mauritians from the Hakka and other Chinese sub-ethnic/linguistic groups.”
    I can spot an indian a thousand miles away, when I was 19 years old an indigenous native from the Caribbean told me my features were those of the oldest indians known to man, thousands of years old, the ones that travelled from Africa through the world….and populated the west,
    …..trust me I know what a real indian looks like and it’s not those silky hair crooks and pretenders yall got in Barbados…..they are bad carbon copies of what real indians look like.

    ++++++++++++++++

    Doesn’t this qualify as a racist rant?

    Mauritius was also a part of the British Empire!!!

    But Quakers I can’t find going there.

    So the Barbadian experience gave freedom to Mauritius as well.

    Here are some names of Mauritian slaves who were emancipated through our ancestors’ efforts!!

    http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=BritishSlaves&gss=sfs28_ms_db&new=1&rank=1&msT=1&gskw=mauritius&MSAV=1&uidh=ud5

    You see the place of Barbados in World History?

    Easily provable, no need for debate!!!!

    I am prepared to bet that the majority of the Barbadian population is of Afro European descent!!

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