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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. PLT

    Chuckle…..excuse for what…….being able to see clearly as a Pelau…..hahaha…..yours has been clouded by your 40 year sojourn in the diaspora…….Bimmers used to describe returning nationals as mad people…..they may have had a point.

  2. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Vincent Haynes,
    It is preposterous to believe that Stockholm syndrome is 100% pervasive. Dribbler was suggesting that it occurred, not that it was universal. Moreover, anyone with even a hint of ethics recognizes that Stockholm syndrome is triggered by cruelty and injustice, not by any kind of kindness and consideration. It is pure evil to suggest that Stockholm syndrome somehow excuses the depredations of the torturer.

    Charting a way forward for Barbados is impossible without a sober and truthful appraisal of the past. The present and future are built upon the past as certainly as the ground floor is built upon the foundation. One of the main reasons for the mess our country is in is that we have been trying to build it on a false foundation. Those who fight tooth and nail against looking clearly at the past are doing so because they do not wish Barbados to progress… they wish to keep the country “spinning top in mud.”

  3. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Vincent Haynes,
    You are working hard to stop people from looking at the truth… what is your excuse for that?

  4. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Vincent Haynes,
    So I’ve destroyed your pathetic assertion that Stockholm syndrome excuses the evil of the plantocracy. I’ve blown away your pretense that the past does not matter.

    Wheel and come again…

  5. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Vincent Haynes,
    Have you not noticed that I have categorically disproved every single solitary argument that John has advanced on this thread? He is reduced to pathetic attempts to change the subject…

  6. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Vincent’s intent to help minorities steal everything from the majority population and leave them destitute so they will continue to be the perfect slaves in Barbados’ slave society.

    The truth will never get the slugs like John and Vincent the final outcome they are working so hard to get….the destruction of the majority population. ….the truth has no place in that scenario,

    But Karma is marching..

    …..”time is better spent charting the way forward that does not include any begging bowls rather than continuously going around the mulberry bush and spinning top in mud.”

    Time would be better spent getting rid of the minorities with their begging bowls always focused on taxpayers and pensioners money.

    John deserves worse than torture, I am only sorry am not the one delivering it…I would be exceedingly creative, but make absolutely sure he feels every second.

  7. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Vincent Haynes,
    And I’ve disproved everything he has asserted with decency, honesty, and sensitivity to the particular crosses that are his to bear. For fu*ks sake I’ve even wept for him.


  8. PLT

    Chuckle…I am back…..sorry ole son you have proven nothing on here other than wallow with glee in whatever mishaps you perceived John to have suffered and if I was John I would reject those crocodile tears.

    Really amazing that the diaspora believe they can waltz in here after decades and dictate to us…….haha….the new masters…..wuhloss.


  9. peterlawrencethompson September 8, 2017 at 3:41 PM #
    John, it was not, but it would not matter an iota if it were.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    You are winging it!!!

    I can’t think of any of the ruins of forts along the west coast, either on the first high cliff or on the coast that have guns that do not face the sea!!

    Do you think a slave attack would come from the sea?

    How did the forts from Maycocks Bay to Kendal Point that are clearly shown on Mayo’s 1722 Map communicate in case of attack?

    When American Privateers attacked Speightstown during the American Revolutionary war, how did the forts around Speightstown communicate with St. Ann’s fort?

    There was a Hill fort over looking Heywoods right next to Dover Fort, where the Police Station was!!!!!

    You can waltz in and out from the land side, the guns face the sea!!

    The historical record from prior to 1689 show Quakers being penalized for not contributing resources to the upkeep of the forts?

    Clearly the forts existed from the year dot …. and there had to be a communication system!!!!

    I have always heard that there was an improved process of communication prompted by the 1816 uprising and signal stations were built but what communication system did it supersede?

    Cotton Tower is located in one of the least populated parishes in the island in terms of slaves.

    There is no evidence that I have seen of a single cannon!!

    In 1817 returns for St. Joseph show 3,467 slaves a third of which were under 10

    St. Andrew was the least populated with 3,394 slaves, a third of which were under 10.

    Where is the corresponding station in St. Andrew?

    Grenade Hall in line of site with Cotton Tower and Dover Fort.

    Go and walk those areas and look at the stations.

    Gun Hill and Moncriefe do command a view of the land as well as the sea.

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

    PLT ……save ya tears for the majority population who the likes of John are working very hard to drive into poverty in order to reenslave….

    ….if I get my hands on him, then he will know what systemic torture is, he cant be that bad if he is on here posting such demonic shit…cause if the likes of me got on opportunity to go nuclear on him, he wont have the energy to post such viles thoughts for other humans.

    And ya better believe these lowlifes believe they own Barbados, when they can so easily be chased the hell out and off the island….., because there are so few of them.


  11. … but ….. if you go and look at the forts you will immediately realise they are completely unsubstantial, not much resources applied!!

    St. Ann’s at the Garrison is perhaps exceptional, but two by four.

    The signal station at Moncreife I can’t recall even seeing a stone remaining!!

    It is because there was not much to steal … or defend in Barbados!!

    What the Quakers had was wealth, not riches and that wealth could never be stolen or destroyed!!

    Now here are proper forts in Puerto Rico and Cuba

    http://www.puertoricodaytrips.com/el-morro/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morro_Castle_(fortress)

    These defended the riches of Spain plundered from the civilizations in Central and South America.

    The Spanish had stolen gold and everybody wanted to steal it from them … transportable riches …. but no wealth.

    Look at St. Vincent, the British built a substantial fort there, not because of the slaves, but because of the Caribs!!

    In 99% of the relationships between owner and slave in Barbados everything I have seen screams mutual respect and caring.

    In matters of punishment the letter of the law was followed, but no different to anything that would have happened in England.

    Even in capital punishment, Quakers are involved … Amnesty International.

    http://www.quakersintheworld.org/quakers-in-action/85/Amnesty-International

    Quakers did not suddenly become humane, they always were … and most if not all early Barbadian planters were Quaker

    Ergo, slaves received humane treatment.

    …. and it is the Barbadian Quaker experience that led to the abolition of slavery … simple inescapable conclusion!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


  12. A clergyman (maybe even a Quaker, and a much more reliable witness than Fitzherbert) reported to Schomburgk that, in the summer of 1841 alone, 541 children had starved to death.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Please quote the page number.

    The most I can find about the 1840/41 period is a reference to the drop in sugar output due to unseasonal weather.

    That might support a period of hardship you are alleging but just give me the page number let me check for myself!!


  13. Peter

    Have you noticed something else about the construction of Cotton Tower.

    It looks kind of strong, perhaps hurricane proof give its exposed position!!

    Let’s see, hurricane in 1831 blew down most churches.

    Hurricane in 1898 … devastation

    Janet, 1955

    Still standing!!

  14. Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well @ Consequences Observing Blogger

    ….Really amazing that the diaspora believe they can waltz in here after decades and dictate to us…..

    PLT…..i always suspected when bajans returned to the island to give back and contribute to the island and were told by their own people..wunnuh tink wunnuh could come back here and change thinks, wunnuh better go bach where wunnuh come from….that they are mimicking what minorities told them to say, nonsense put in their heads that they wanted them to say, to deter any positive changes that would benefit the majority population….

    now here is Vincent, unable to contain himself, blurting out the same sentiment…proving my point without a doubt.

    ah hope he didnt think it escaped my notice.


  15. Give back? Surely not our beloved deportees.

    We send our best scholars abroad to study in USA and UK with scholarships. And they stay there after their studies and pay back their scholarships.

    All we got the last ten years from the States where guns, deportees running the drug gangs in Blackrock and Marston Gibson. No investment from the States and no money. Zero.


  16. WW&C

    Chuckle….ah see yuh got a new partner to help you spew more fifth columnist bile.

    Try and get your house in order first before you try to convince sensible people.


  17. @ PLT
    Boss, any more lashes like that in Vincent’s donkey …and you could be up for murder yuh….

    Excellently executed….. especially your demolition of his idiotic assertion that we should forget the past, and somehow build some kind of ‘pelaus-based’ shiite society.
    …as if it is wise to build on a false foundation.

    Everyone – thanks to BU – have been able to see the SERIOUS cracks that exist in the Bajan ‘foundation’ through the exhaustive look that we have had into John’s mentality…. a mentality that is endemic in an influential sector of our population.

    When Bushie asserted previously, that those ‘pelaus’ who sold off Bajan assets to foreign interests, did so IN ORDER TO AVOID HAVING BLACKS – who they consider to be inferior, coming into ownership, …and excelling in ways that THEY had failed to do in 4 centuries of being in almost TOTAL control.

    The albino-centric traitors who found themselves in charge of entities like BS&T, BL&P, Banks, etc – DELIBERATELY disposed of those assets when it became clear that highly competent BLACKS were inevitably poised to succeed them…
    LOL
    Money B’s father too…. but ‘poor’ Money B is so good natured at heart, that he REFUSES to see the truth…

    That these traitors have been able to disenfranchise ALL future generations of black bajans, …and do so by CONVINCING a majority of the brass bowls that they were doing us a favour, has ONLY been possible because we have gullible Judases such as Vincent, who are ever anxious to worship them like the shameless blacks who worshipped Fitzherbert as he approached Turners Hall ….in the piece posted by John above.

    Shiite man, they even managed to bribe and otherwise bamboozle the pack of JAs we elected in parliament to sell off state ass….like it was some kinda nationalistic pastime…

    You gotta REAL big job on hand PLT….


  18. David

    Just listen to Rush …. mayor of Realville, right 99.8% of the time!!


  19. Bush Tea,

    The big sellout will come after next election. Privatization and devaluation. The rich and expats will buy up half of Barbados for some cents.


  20. Bushie

    Chuckle…..poor you not an original thought always hanging on somebody coat tail……hahaha…..the original brassbowl……wuhloss.


  21. @Vincent, who taught you English at school?…was it the bridge master they called Panjo or as the Bushman noted recently, was it the rather more attractive Pam Hinkson. Whomever it was they would have given you 2 out 10 re the inference made on the Stockholm Syndrome remarks.

    Facetious or glib would best describe my entire post. Definitely not a post that validated John’s view.

    Terribly disappointed that you could cite one part but dismiss the summary statement or the word “right” shown in quotes which should have clearly given the true intent.

    But this little exercise reinforces the main thrust from @PLT perfectly:

    … Exactly as done with those simple words, previously sage and balanced young men now in their senior years will twist and turn the incontrovetible facts of life to suit their warped interpretations of the way forward.

    Sad all around.


  22. @ Tron
    The rich and expats will buy up half of Barbados for some cents.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    After next elections?
    Boss we are already there. Who will these new players be buying from? Baloney, Bizzy, COW and Simpson? …or from the Trickidadians?
    LOL … not from stinking Bushie… 🙂

    @ Vincent
    Poor you not an original thought always hanging on somebody coat tail……
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Of all the silly things to accuse Bushie of…

    Name ANYONE, ANYWHERE who is ANYTHING like Bushie….!!!
    Whose (mortal) coat tail could Bushie hold on to?

    Steupsss … you are hopeless…..
    YOU had better stop following John around …trying to polish his donkey…


  23. DPD

    We will agree to disagree on this matter….bigger fish to fry….let them gather.


  24. Bushie

    Chuckle……keep singing for your supper……we produced all sorts….hahaha.

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

    Vincent…my house is fine, it’s yours that is being rocked, it’s endless, nonstop worldwide exposure for yall thieves going forward…..ya in the big leagues now, can’t hide in the shadows sneaking around to thief and deceive using ya begging bowls anymore.

    Karma is on the march.

    Tron…many, many bajans returned to contribute and had to run from the slave society over the decades, I know some who ran twice, because they tried again and still met resistance.

    Scholars meet the same fate when they return to contribute…the smarter ones pay off their loans, stay where they are and leave the hardheaded majority bajans to enjoy their disenfranchisement in their slave society in peace.


  26. WWC

    You poor demented soul…. Hopefully your acolytes will take care of you…..you have my pity.


  27. All of the boys from my form who won exhibitions or scholarships are here. every last one!!!


  28. …. well … except one


  29. John September 8, 2017 at 6:23 PM #
    A clergyman (maybe even a Quaker, and a much more reliable witness than Fitzherbert) reported to Schomburgk that, in the summer of 1841 alone, 541 children had starved to death.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Please quote the page number.

    You can’t, can you?

    The downloaded version I have is searchable!!

    Can’t find a mention!!

    Let me know if I am wrong.


  30. Hmmm……looks like PLT is a bit of a fraud with his own agenda……I thought so.

  31. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    You two old farts are on your way out Vincent and John…ah just want yall to live long enough to see the changes on the island up in ya withered faces.

    The younger generation of scholars are not interested in living a pretensive life on the island, only you old fools would do so trying to relive evil….cause ya cant go anywhere else and display the savage disgusting behaviors you do in Barbados…it will not be accepted.

    I dont know what you are rambling on and on about, I have been well taken care of….for decades, anything else is gravy…

    …ya will never find me with any begging bowls in hand trying to fleece bajan pensioners and taxpayers though.., that’s yall thing, too low class for me.


  32. What so wrong about Bajans who ventured to study abroad and never returned home to “contribute”? Some people never heard the term “Brain drain” which has affected almost every country in the world even wealthy ones like Canada that has been losing top researchers in all fields toThe USA for decades. This is not new to Barbados many of our teachers, legal officers and others have been lost to other Caribbean countries for years, however in the last generation the countries of choice have changed.

    Also many people who go abroad to study meet their significant other and decide to settle in that locale where they can both be employed rather than return to uncertainty. We ought to realise that people are going to avail themselves of what they believe is the best opportunity for their future and if that entails making choices which preclude their returning home they will seize the opportunity.

  33. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    Hi John, I was at a panel discussion on youth unemployment, so I have not had the pleasure of giggling at your responses until now. I don’t have a copy of Schombergk; why would I waste my time with that. You can find the reference in Beckles’ “A History of Barbados” pg 192.

  34. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @vincent haynesw thinks “you have proven nothing on here”

    Ask any other sane person who reads this thread. Go ahead… I dare you. I do not wallow in anyone’s misfortune; I think even you can discern the difference between empathy and glee, so I am forced to the conclusion that you are simply lying.


  35. So, is Beckles the one referring to Schomburgk?

    If he is I cannot find what you are describing

  36. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    Hi John,
    It is delightful the way in which you attempt to dispute what I tell you but end up proving me correct. “In matters of punishment the letter of the law was followed.”

    That’s right, “An Act for the Better Ordering and Governing of Negroes,” 1661. This was the most influential piece of legislation ever passed by the Barbados parliament, being the legal foundation for the deprivation of all human rights from slaves in stark contrast to indentured servants who were simply denied their liberty for seven years. Instead the slaves were denied their liberty, their own bodies, their lives, and their humanity for all their descendants to the end of time; I conveniently have a photo-reproduction that I got from the British archives.

    They had such compassion for their slaves that if a White servant was caught giving succor top a slave who had run away they needed:
    CLAUSE 4:
    . . . Servant shall immediately upon Conviction thereof receive nine and thirty lashes upon his naked back by order of the next justice of the Peace to some Constable or the Common Executioner and after Execution of his time of service shall serve the owner of the said Negro the full term and space of seven years and a Record thereof by the said justice before such examination, shall be had. . .

    They loved and trusted their slaves so much that they needed:
    CLAUSE 11:
    . . . that every overseer of a family in this Isle shall cause all his Negro houses to be
    searched diligently and effectually once every fourteen days for clubs, wooden swords, or
    other mischievous weapons and finding any to take them away and cause them to be
    burned. . .

    And having such Christian respect for slaves they really had not any need to legislate that:
    CLAUSE 13:
    . . . being brutish Slaves deserve not for the baseness of their Conditions to be tried by the legal trial of twelve Men of their appears or Neighbourhood . . .

    And of course there was absolutely no disloyalty among the slave before the the unpleasantness of 1816, so in 1661 the had to write:
    . . . . . . .CLAUSE 17:
    . . . that if any Negro shall make Insurrection or rise in rebellion against the place or
    people or make preparation of Arms, powder or offensive Weapons or hold any Council or
    conspiracy for raising Mutinies or rebellion in the Isle as hath been formerly attempted. . .

    The Quaker sense of Justice was so acute that they wrote:
    CLAUSE 20:
    . . . But if any poor small freeholder or other person kill a Negro by night out of the Common
    path and stealing the provision, swine, or other goods he shall not be accomptable for it,
    any Law, Statute or ordinance to the contrary notwithstanding. . .

    Indeed John “In matters of punishment the letter of the law was followed.” So the Bajan plantocracy wrote laws that go down in the history of jurisprudence as the most bigoted, heinous atrocities in the entire history of the British empire. Aren’t you proud?

  37. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    Hi John,
    You say “I can’t think of any of the ruins of forts along the west coast, either on the first high cliff or on the coast that have guns that do not face the sea!!”

    Do you see any guns at all at Cotton Tower?? How can a military installation with no big guns possibly be for anything else other that to shoot the slaves trying to stop the planters from signalling the Garrison to send the regiment.

    You point out “It looks kind of strong, perhaps hurricane proof give its exposed position!!”

    You’re damn right. It was built strong to withstand an assault by the slaves who did not love their masters quite enough. They could have simply built a stronghold that was sturdy enough to keep intruders out, but I’m sure you know what the embrasures are for: to give a 360 degree field of fire for the occupants of Cotton Tower, creating a killing field in every direction of approach.

    You emphasize that unlike the Spanish colonies “there was not much to steal … or defend in Barbados!!”

    Right again John! You prove my point. There was no reason at all to expect the French or Spanish navies. This was built entirely to defend the only thing the planters feared losing: their ability to steal the humanity of anyone with the wrong colour skin.

    Thanks for reinforcing the truth of my assertions.

  38. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    John,
    The reference is Hilary Beckles’ “A History of Barbados,” Cambridge University Press 2006, pg 192


  39. But if you look at when the Quakers came on the scene first in England in 1648 you will realise that it would have been extremely unlikely that Quakers would be in control in Barbados in 1661.

    Went through this point already!!

    It’s too easy!!

    Check the Journal of George Fox

    In Prison, 1648-49, then 1653 then 1655-66, then 1662-1665 then 1673-78!!

    In between times in jail he paid a visit to Barbados, 1671.

    I’ll see if I can find the comment I posted way back to respond to the Slave Code point!!


  40. John May 15, 2017 at 12:08 PM #
    The year 1648 is generally taken as the appearance of the Quakers in England.
    The year 1657 is the year of George Fox’s writings on the treatment of slaves and Indians.
    Quakers were probably not in control of Barbados in 1661!!
    The year 1676 was the year which a law was passed which forbad Quakers having slaves at their meetings and sharing the Gospel with them!!
    Sit and think for a while and see if you can put the sequence together in a manner which makes sense!!
    Just look at these simple facts and see if you can connect the dots.

  41. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @vincent haynesw September 8, 2017 at 9:36 PM

    Damn right I have an agenda… a really simple one… the plain unvarnished truth. You and John are free to argue with Cambridge University Press… have fun, knock yourselves out.


  42. Been through the whole issue of the slave code since May 2017!!


  43. … and back in 2016

    John September 28, 2016 at 7:22 PM #
    George Fox started his ministry in 1648.
    Quaker control of Barbados is beginning to take root by the mid 1650’s.
    By 1657 he is beginning to put his thinking on the institution into writing.
    Fox writes to Friends who own negro and indian slaves beyond the seas on their tratment.
    In 1661, the Barbados Slave Code is enacted legalizing the institution in Barbados.
    If you look at early wills you will see some Quakers freed their slaves.
    The will of Hanna Adcock written 27th August 1657 gives freedom to her negro servant, Sarah.
    William Pickering in his will 10 years later gives freedom to his negro man Tom.
    In 1695, Tobias Clutterbuck gave freedom and land in St. Lucy to his negro woman, Sarah, and her children, Phylis, Penelope and Bishnell. The land looks like it was close to Maddox.
    In 1699, John Mayre of St. Philip gives freedom to his black boy, John Mayre and his education is to be seen to by “my wife Elizabeth”. At Elizabeth’s death “my plantation” is to go to my black boy John Mayre and if he is dead, to his mother Moll, her mother Gitte and her son Cudjo with their freedom.
    … and in 1721, the owner of who I believe was one of my ancestors freed him.
    Most plantations were a matter of a few acres and their owners owned a few slaves.
    This looks like a good read.
    “The Power that Giveth Liberty and Freedom”: The Barbadian Origins of Quaker Anti slavery Rhetoric, 1657–76
    ariel.ucalgary.ca/ariel/index.php/ariel/article/download/25/22
    Go do some reading!!!!!


  44. The Quakers were constantly in trouble with the establishment … Puritans.

    The Puritans won the English Civil War and took over the Church of England.

    One by one, those same Puritans came around to the Quaker thinking.

    In Barbados, I reckon Quakers dominated and controlled in the 1680’s.

    Pennsylvania opened up in 1681 … many left Barbados for there and in 1689 the Act of Toleration stopped the persecution opening up the whole of America.

    I suspect as the 1700’s progressed, more and more left Barbados and went to Pennsylvania and other parts of America.

    In the early days of Quakerism, Puritans in America used to hang Quakers!!

    Check Leddra, a Barbadian Quaker who was hung in America for his beliefs.


  45. @John September 7, 2017 at 11:36 AM “Everything isn’t bad about that period, particularly the means of survival in a resource poor country!!”

    For much of that 300 years Barbados was NOT a resource poor country, not when sugar sold for cocaine-like prices.

    But as we know the labourers for the first 200 years received nothing, and for 100 years afterwards received next thing to nothing.

    It is dishonest to say that Barbados was a resource poor country.


  46. I look at the fortifications that the British built in Barbados and I know that they did not think of Barbados as resource poor. One does not heavily arm its military and build massive fortifications to protect resource poor places.

    I mean right now Simple Simon has no gun, legal or illegal, because the Simple has nothing to protect…however if I was rich, I would have the gun, the safe, the big dogs, the high walls, the wrought iron gates and the security guards…


  47. So yes we know that Barbados was rich. Barbados was very very rich.

    But the majority of the people were poor, poor, poor.

    Why was that so John?

  48. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    I’m glad John, if some Quakers freed their slaves in 1661. However you know from looking at the census figures that slavery continued to be the institution on which the entire Barbados economy was based.

    I’m glad that you have “Been through the whole issue of the slave code since May 2017!!” so you know its impact on the Atlantic slave trade. Yes the planters followed the law, they wrote the law, and the law was the epitome of evil.

    I’m happy to hear that the Quakers were not in control of Barbados in 1661, but all who wrote the 1661 law called themselves Christian. The point is John, that the overwhelming preponderance of historical evidence proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that the treatment of slaves in Barbados was a crime against humanity. Of course there were some masters who were less bad that others… there were probably a couple of kind guards in Treblinka too, but that does not change the fundamental nature of the crime.

    I’m even glad that your contemplation of the relative humanity of Quakers in contrast to their contemporaries gives you some kind of comfort. But I am not saying that you were a slave owner… there is no need to seek absolution from me. I am simply pointing you toward the truth about Bajan slave society, not telling you that you were personally responsible for it.

    Your responsibility is simply to acknowledge the truth of Bajan slavery and work in your own life not to inflict cruelty on other human beings. (I am not accusing you of inflicting cruelty; I have no knowledge of you since 1974, and I never saw you being cruel then.)

    I will make the time to read “The Power that Giveth Liberty and Freedom,” but that URL gives me a 404 Not Found.

  49. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Simple Simon
    It may seem to you that I am splitting hairs, but I agree with John that Barbados was not rich. The presence of fabulously rich drug lords in Columbia does not make Columbia rich. Your cocaine analogy is very apt; sugar was the cocaine of the 17th and 18th century. The plantocrats were the drug lords of their era and the drug profits they extracted from Barbados by exploiting slaves built a very large portion of the British empire, but Barbados was never rich.

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