โ† Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Jeff Cumberbatch – Chairman of the FTC and Deputy Dean, Law Faculty, UWI, Cave Hill

‘Emergencies’ have always been the pretext on which the safeguards of individual liberty have been eroded. Friedrich August von Hayek

It seems unlikely that I should be personally affected by the operation of the proposed legislation. After all, I am essentially a homebody and scarcely to be found on the road at โ€œungodlyโ€ hours so as to be inconvenienced by a traditional curfew and it is at least doubtful that my neighbourhood would be subject to any police cordon as a designated area as is provided for in the Act. Yet, as a fairly liberal thinker so far as human rights are concerned, there are more things than a few that trouble me about the provisions of the proposed Police (Amendment) Act 2017. Too besides, I am a fan of Martin Niemรถllerโ€™s celebrated poem. You know; โ€œFirst they came for the socialistsโ€ฆโ€

Permit me to concede from the outset that the use of emergency powers by the modern state is and has been since time immemorial a widely accepted aspect of constitutional governance. In a brilliant article titled The Law of the exception: A typology of emergency powers published in 2004, Professors Frerejohn and Pasquino of New York University argue:

When the public safety is seriously threatened, there may be a need for quick and decisive action that cannot perhaps, wait for the deliberate pace of ordinary constitutional ruleโ€ฆ

They posit further that this is a central dilemma of a liberal constitutional government in that the rights and protections it provides and preserves can prevent the government from responding efficiently and energetically to enemies that would destroy those rights and perhaps even the constitutional order itself. Indeed, as they note, this has been the case since Roman times, for in cases of emergency the Roman Senate could direct the consuls to appoint a dictator for a temporary period of up to six months. This dictator was authorized to suspend rights and legal processes and to marshal military and other forces in order to deal with the threat of insurrection or invasion.

Further, the mutual trust and confidence that ought to subsist between the citizen and the State should entail, whenever a substantial limitation of rights is proposed by the State, as full a briefing to the citizenry, as may be practicable without compromising state security, should be provided before the institution of such a regime.

Section 25 of our Constitution reflects this thesis to some extent though, of course, unlike the ancient Romans, the concept of a dictator is antithetical to our ethos of constitutional governance. The section provides for the circumstances when a state of emergency is deemed to exist; namely, when Barbados is engaged in warfare or where there is a proclamation by the Governor General, subject to certain stipulated conditions, that a state of public emergency exists or where there is in force a resolution of each House supported by the votes of not less than two-thirds of all the members of that House declaring that the democratic institutions in Barbados are threatened by subversion.

Moreover, where the state of emergency exists as a result of a gubernatorial proclamation, as in Roman times, there is a six month period to which this may be limited though it is subject to extension from time to time for further periods of six months by resolution of a majority of all the members of the House of Assembly.

It seems clear then that our system contemplates the legitimate erosion by the Executive, with Parliamentary approval, of certain fundamental rights in times of national emergency. The actuality is, however, that in our system, there is no concrete separation of power between the executive and the Parliament. It might be for this reason therefore, that the relevant section requires not merely an ordinary, but a special majority in both Houses for the effectiveness of any parliamentary resolution that democratic institutions in Barbados are threatened by subversion.

There is little doubt that the proposed legislation, even though not titled emergency powers legislation, approximates to this by enlarging the police power, with a concomitant loss of liberty on the part of an affected citizen. For instance, clause 19A (2) provides as follows:

The Commissioner may, with the written approval of the Minister impose either a curfew for a period not exceeding 2 days, or a special investigation period in a designated area in Barbados, in order to preserve and promote peace, public order or public safety and investigate where

(a) an incident of serious violence has occurred in any (sic) area in Barbados; or

(b) (b) an incident of serious violence may occur in any area in Barbadosโ€

During this period of curfew, police powers are significantly enhanced. A member of the police force, under the supervision of an officer of the rank of Inspector or above, will be able to, inter alia, between 5 am and 8 pm (scarcely ungodly), search any premises in the designated area without warrant where that member of the force (the constable and not necessarily the supervising officer) has a reasonable suspicion that an offence has been committed, is being committed or is about to be committed on the premises; to stop and search any person walking or sitting in the designated area where that member of the Force has a reasonable suspicion that an offence has been committed, is being committed or about to be committed; and to search any item or anything being carried or held by that person for an offensive weapon, any illegal drugs or stolen property and to stop and search any vehicle in or any vehicle entering or exiting the designated area, its driver or passenger for an offensive weapon, an illegal drug or stolen property where that member of the force has a reasonable suspicion that an offence has been committed, is being committed or about to be committed.

It is to be noted that the threshold of โ€œreasonable suspicionโ€ is perhaps the lowest form of justification for police action. It has been determined that it may arise from information that is different in quantity or content from and less reliable than that required to establish probable cause, a more favourable threshold to the accused. Furthermore, the existence of โ€œreasonable suspicionโ€ is to be determined after the impugned event and not at the time of or prior to the police action.

It seems clear that the local authorities are contemplating a period of substantial social disruption. Existence of the mutual trust that I referred to earlier would ordinarily require that the populace be taken into the confidence of the authorities, unless this may lead to a compromise of the strategic initiatives necessary to combat this imminent threat to the social order.

In the absence of such information, people are liable to ascribe all sorts of nefarious motives to the government on the enactment of the proposed legislation and worse, to become increasingly fearful of the impact on them and their families of whatever might ensue from the anticipated insurrection. Silence is clearly not golden here. There is a clamant need for conversation.


Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

190 responses to “The Jeff Cumberatch Column – Emergency Powers and Good Governance”


  1. and that is why black people everywhere MUST close ranks to protect themselves and each other, particularly from abusive black governments..

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

    Family works!!


  2. Well well

    Why you don’t go and rest your weary soul

    Are you and Akanni McDowell going to appoint these Public Officers ?

    After wunnah telling them fuh years to stop wuk and march against the government ?

    I tell wunnah already the majority of the Public Officers smarter than you all think !

    Mia Mottley and Delisle Worrell plan to send home 10,000 Public Officers if the BLP gain office in 2018

    Public Officers deserves better

    Dems Now……Dems Forever


  3. CANADA:

    The Emergencies Act differs from the War Measures Act in two important ways:

    A declaration of an emergency by the Cabinet must be reviewed by Parliament.

    Any temporary laws made under the Act are subject to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

    Thus any attempt by the government to suspend the civil rights of Canadians, even in an emergency, will be subject to the “reasonable and justified” test under section 1 of the Charter.[1]

    BARBADOS:……Build barricade and lock down chosen neighborhoods!!!


  4. DEMS NOW…..DEMS TILL ELECTION DAY…..

  5. Well Well @ Cut and Paste @ Your Service Avatar
    Well Well @ Cut and Paste @ Your Service

    they wont need to do that, they just have to reach out to Amnesty International, peaceful resistance….reach out to all human rights groups worldwide , put the island in the spotlight, make the human rights violators in parliament famous worldwide, which makes it much easier to lock them up later.

    dont even entertain the idea of suffering mentally and in silence like Vincentians.

    i remember when Gonzales brought the computer Act to permanently silence Vincentians, he actually thought that was gonna work, well just look at him now..aint it.

  6. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ John February 5, 2018 at 9:46 AM #
    โ€œโ€ฆ and if we accept that family controlled most people in Barbados prior to the 1960โ€™s then it follows it was alive and working for centuries.
    All we need to understand is how and why it was destroyed!!โ€

    Glad you raise this Bajan family issue.

    Are you referring to the โ€œWhiteโ€ family ties or the black family bonds of slavery and shackles of serfdom aka plantation apprenticeship?

    Why would the maintenance of the family would be in the interest of the slave owners whose goal was to break all cultural ties of the imported and locally grown black slaves as a basic method of mental and physical control?
    The black family was destroyed when the members were stripped of their West African identities and the males turned into โ€˜studdingโ€™ machines to produce more indigenous black hands for the sugar cane fields and mills; an early example of import substitution.

    All the โ€œfamily namesโ€ which you mentioned from My Lordโ€™s Hill are all adopted from the same โ€˜whiteโ€™ families who- in the name of their Lord- stole the land from the Amerindians just like the white (European) families did to the Native Americans.

    Almost all black family names have been โ€˜adoptedโ€™ from their former slave masters/owners who were the descendants of English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish โ€˜transported immigrantsโ€™ (with a few Jewish names from the Iberian Peninsula deliberately โ€™Anglicizedโ€™ for climbing the slave trading commercial ladder).

    Now why does the name โ€œHallโ€ have such a prominence on the Bajan landscape not only as the place name of former โ€˜spaciousโ€™ bagatelles but also as the handle of many a black person whose ancestors were the property of those Halls of service and servitude.

  7. Well Well @ Cut and Paste @ Your Service Avatar
    Well Well @ Cut and Paste @ Your Service

    Fractured…you dont get tired yelling my moniker, like i keep telling others on here, find yaself a girlfriend or a wife then ya can call after them all day.

    human rights abuses are a blight and curse on any country, a blight and curse on earth….has been for centuries…..it has to be destroyed in Barbados, even before it begins…before it spreads like a cancer and becomes malignant.

  8. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Fractured BLP February 5, 2018 at 10:40 AM #

    Weren’t the public sector workers given similar assurances prior to the 2013 elections that not one worker would be sent home?

    And what happened a few months after being tricked?

    โ€˜Fool them once shame on you, fool them twice shame on the foolsโ€™.

    Lord King Fumble might appoint them before he rings the bell to buy votes but the IMF, in a few months, would surely disappoint.

    Take a page out of the book of lies and broken promises just like the old lady on the bus. What is the sense of having a free bus pass when there are no buses to catch?

    But we have to give Lord Fumble his royal jacket. He really knows his subjects. Just a court of black stooges, clowns and fools who can be easily bought for a promise as their comfort.


  9. All the โ€œfamily namesโ€ which you mentioned from My Lordโ€™s Hill are all adopted from the same โ€˜whiteโ€™ families

    Now why does the name โ€œHallโ€ have such a prominence on the Bajan landscape

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

    Hall was an early family name too!!!

    For example, Giles and Maudlin Hall had wills dated 1686 and 1700, husband and wife. From St. Peter.

    There is a Hugh Hall whose will is dated 1698 and he was from St. Michael. He asked to be buried in the manner of the Quakers.

    There is also a John Hall from St. James whose will is dated 1681.

    Arthur Hall from St. Michael wrote a will in 1668.

    Elizabeth Hall St. Andrew, 1716

    Thomas Hall St. Thomas 1704

    I think the choice (there that word is again) of a surname is a mark of respect particular slaves had for particular families …. Quakers …. associated with them or their ancestors.

    Sometimes those family names were the same as their owners or former owners, but not always.

    I always come across surnames that disappeared before slavery ended and yet they are surnames adopted by slaves and former slaves.

    It is possible Hall also referred to a house, …. perhaps a “Meeting House” or a congregation of people!!

    So Hall as a place name, eg Arch Hall, Rock Hall etc., could denote locations where Quakers and their slaves who chose to listen, congregated for religious meetings.


  10. How many Rock Hall’s can you count in Barbados?


  11. Professor Woodville Marshall’s book on the place names of Barbados has three parishes where there are no “Rock Halls” … St. Michael, St. George and St. Joseph.

    Like ROCK, HOPE is present is all parishes.

    HOPE and ROCK …. duuuuuh!!

  12. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    I hope these officers are not also being blackmailed by government for their votes in order for the vacancies to be filled…,a clear violation of their rights.

    “caswell-franklin-sunday-2015
    Caswell Franklyn (FILE)

    Trouble appears to be brewing at the Customs Department once again. This time itโ€™s over the interview process for the 100 vacant positions in the department as efforts to transition to the Barbados Revenue Authority (BRA) continue.

    General secretary of the Unity Workersโ€™ Union (UWU), Caswell Franklyn, is so incensed over the issue that he plans to write Governor General Dame Sandra Mason asking her to investigate the matter.

    โ€œI am going to write the Governor General to point out that the system is [flawed] and that she needs to investigate. I am writing the Governor General hoping that she would follow the rules and do the right thing,โ€ he told the DAILY NATION yesterday.

    And if that did not work, Franklyn declared he was willing to โ€œshut the place downโ€.

    Franklyn, whose UWU represents 72 of the approximately 200 workers in the department, alleged there was some โ€œhandpickingโ€ in the interview process. “


  13. How many Gospel Halls and Mission Halls are there in Barbados?

    It isn’t by accident that we now face draconian measures to control the population!!

  14. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ John February 5, 2018 at 11:37 AM

    John, why donโ€™t you change your simple moniker to the Bajan half-breed โ€œScarlet Pimpernelโ€?

    You are good enough to make Houdini look like a boy scout.

    You would have made a great WW1 front-line soldier in dodging bullets and even able to out-manoeuvre the flying Red Baron in avoiding the enemyโ€™s barrage of ground artillery.

    What we want to hear from you is when did the black families start to put down roots in Barbados.

    Were the black studs married to the massa-discarded bed wenches in your Quaker meeting rooms (Halls) in the sight of your white god with their mulatto picaninnies as the bridesmaids and page boys?

    Whatโ€™s the name of that โ€˜bushyโ€™ white wife of the Governor of the Island who undertook a mass marriage campaign to put an end to fornication among the blacks living in Christian sin by predating Sun Myung Moon by her charitable acts of spreading black family values West African style, polygamy including?


  15. Well well

    You better behave yourself and stop pompasetting on BU

    You well know ( no pun intended) that waiting pon on of those appointment letters – after Mia & Akanni trick you into marching for unreasonable salary increases.

    Dumb boy !


  16. you waiting pon one of those appointment letters

  17. Jefferson Cumberbatch Avatar
    Jefferson Cumberbatch

    Here is an assignment for a future article:
    โ€œContemplating a successful future for Barbados โ€“ the good newsโ€

    @ Bushie, You’re on!

  18. William Skinner Avatar

    This is laughable. Imagine we talking about names that have already been branded nothing but slave names that should have been discarded years ago. We don’t need those ; we can call ourselves anything now. I submit that all the names mentioned , should be changed to the more widely accepted monikers used on BU.


  19. Good suggested topic Jeff

    For Bushie to do justice to it – he would need sometime to interview his Brass bowl friends !!!

    The ones of the Artax & Miller , variety !!


  20. I am sure the people would prefer their tax refunds!

  21. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Fractured…ah know yall unsettled now though, as usual, through your own arrogant, ill informed, unintelligent actions that got ya staring down IMF and a belching, leaking neglected sewage system….that is about to explode.


  22. Sir William Skinner is quite right

  23. Talking Loud Saying Nothing Avatar
    Talking Loud Saying Nothing

    @ Hal,

    โ€œThere is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about.โ€

    โ€• Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

    LOL


  24. Talking Loud Saying Nothing February 5, 2018 at 4:24 PM #

    I have broad shoulders. Nothing better than giving a lot of pensioners something to moan about as they sit in the great ante-chamber waiting for the final call and pondering a life lived.

  25. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Fractured BLP February 5, 2018 at 1:55 PM

    FBLP, (Foolish Bith Lying Pip), why don’t you advise your slumbering beleaguered giant primate inter parris the pariah that now he is on a futile winning streak of promises and performances why not seal the reelection deal by promising the delivery before March 31st of all those already stuffed envelopes containing tax payers refunds from 2013 to 2016.

    The same way the CLICO policyholders and the NHC tenants are smiling all the way to the imaginary bank of long overdue backlog of promises- which will not materialize under the imminent IMF programme- so too would the disappointed taxpayers.

    Come on man, stop looking a gift horse in the mouth and make your promise to the taxpayers due for refunds.

    They would love it the same way public sector workers are glad for the appointments (soon to be transformed into disappointments) instead of a salary increase.

    Isnโ€™t that the kind of electoral spring oats you should be sowing in the wintry days of your dying administration?

    Come on man, Dr. Deliar Worrell might be wo(e)man cu*t but he is not an academic fool. He knows his economic onions and can tell you beyond a shadow of doubt what the IMF has in store for the Bajan public sector.

    If a real โ€˜fightingโ€™ army of defence can be cut back in times of fiscal austerity why not one of occupation and low productivity like the Bajan public sector?

    So what will it be? The disbanding of the ceremonial Defence Force or the cutting back of the local army of leeches and fiscal parasitism?


  26. What we want to hear from you is when did the black families start to put down roots in Barbados.

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

    From the time individuals were given freedom in the 1600’s.

    Look at families like Overton, Cuffley, Sargeant and Kennedy.

    You will find some of their marriage and baptismal records in the parochial registers.

    Overton started in the 1600.s, Cuffley is 1721, Sargeant and Kennedy I will check but either 1600’s or 1700’s.

    I think you may find King Dial’s ancestors also were freed well before emancipation.


  27. ….. that is assuming you want to look at family records which appear in the Church Registers.


  28. http://www.trinidadexpress.com/20180205/news/police-recruit-hopeful-charged-with-uttering-fake-csec-certificate

    Prodigirl

    When one read the story above , we can only hope that MAM has a ” LEGIT ” …….LEC !!

    Because the police ๐Ÿ‘ฎ๐Ÿฝ powers in Barbados ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ง have been widened now !!!

    Pampalam fuh …….MAM !!!


  29. You are good enough to make Houdini look like a boy scout.

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

    I can only do what I do because I have a theory which has so far shown itself to be right!!

    So it fits most if not all scenarios that arise.

    BTW, Houdini had a close run in with the Boy Scouts so doubt if he would ever have wanted to be one!!

    http://www.wildabouthoudini.com/2012/03/houdinis-close-call.html


  30. This fellow liesalot really has no shame.BU concerned about parliamentary abuse of freedoms and this donkeyman writing meaningless mumbojumbo of an era we want to forget like a bad dream that is mainly the vexatious cause of persistent poverty of the negroid group.Reparations long overdue not more brutal laws aimed at innocent citizens.Gaulblineyuh man!


  31. The Maldives government has declared a state of emergency for 15 days amid a political crisis in the island nation.

    Can this happen in Barbados?


  32. I am simply showing why things have changed in Barbados and why GOB finds itself in the position it does!!

    That’s how problems get solved, by understanding their root causes.

  33. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @John February 5, 2018 at 5:22 PM #
    โ€œFrom the time individuals were given freedom in the 1600โ€™s.
    Look at families like Overton, Cuffley, Sargeant and Kennedy.โ€

    In the 1600’s??? That’s a bit early to have been brainwashed of their West African heritage and to readily adopt the ‘family’ names of their white masters!

    Next time you, John Liesalot, will be telling us that those โ€˜black familiesโ€™ (Overton, Cuffley, Sargeant and Kennedy) were given their freedom papers by their dear loving Christian Quaker masters and baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus with new English and Irish names to boot.

  34. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Fractured Fraud….look…..no one wants to hear anymore lying excuses….from your outgoing government.

    “Basseterre, St. Kitts, February 01, 2018 (SKNIS): โ€œPreliminary estimates for 2018 indicate that St. Kitts and Nevisโ€™ economy will once again expand for the third consecutive yearโ€, said Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Dr. the Honourable Timothy Harris.

    Prime Minister Harris was at the time addressing an audience during a press conference on Thursday, February 01, where he noted that for 2018 the economy is predicted to grow by about 3.7 percent.”


  35. Next time you, John Liesalot, will be telling us that those โ€˜black familiesโ€™ (Overton, Cuffley, Sargeant and Kennedy) were given their freedom papers by their dear loving Christian Quaker masters and baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus with new English and Irish names to boot.

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

    Example: Thomas Cuffley’s will in 1721, RB6/6/426 !!!

    Freedom to negro man Jeffrey Cuffley and 4.5 acres in St. Philip

    Freedom to negro woman, Jenney, mother of Jeffrey Cuffley

    Freedom to negro man John Cuffley

    Freedom to negro man Roger Cuffley and 2 acres in St. Philip and if he dies without heirs land to go to Negro Jenney

    Freedom to negro woman Elizabeth Cuffley and 2 acres in St. Philip

    If she dies without heirs, land goes to my negroes, John and Tobias Cuffley.

    Negro girl Bony is to serve Jeffrey Cuffley (free negro) the rest of his life, then freedom.

    Negro boy Tobias Cuffley to serve Jeffrey Cuffley (free negro) for 1 year then freedom.

    I don’t have to say a thing, the legal document (will), says it all!!

    All I have to do is read, learn and inwardly digest!!

    This is how simple and straightforward it is!!

    The problem you have is that all this data is easily available either in book form or on CD … and I have had the CD version from 1994 so it is easy to rebut you …. simplicity itself!!

    Find some better questions to ask, you are being destroyed by simple existing facts, easily corroborated!!

    The facts speak for themselves.

    I reckon I come from one of these free negroes through my grandfather.

    His grandmother was a Cuffley, colored or black, can’t tell.

    So, I reckon I am a part of this Cuffley family which had its beginnings in 1721, more than a century before emancipation …. compliments of a Quaker, Thomas Cuffley!!

  36. Theophilius Gazerts 263 Avatar
    Theophilius Gazerts 263

    I guess Bony spent her life wishing for Jeffrey to die…


  37. Now that the corrupt politicians and their financial elites are aware that their wicked schemes and underhand methods are public knowledge,having destroyed the majority of a once thriving middle class by iniquitious taxes and levies,they resort to draconian laws to attempt to isolate and protect themselves from being held accountable for their unlawful deeds.


  38. Theophilius Gazerts 263 February 5, 2018 at 7:45 PM #
    I guess Bony spent her life wishing for Jeffrey to dieโ€ฆ

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

    Maybe not.

    Jeffrey was under no obligation to leave her his land so she would have had to fend for herself as a free girl or woman.

    My guess is she was young, perhaps orphaned, and Thomas Cuffley wanted to make sure she was cared for by Jeffrey at least until he died.

    Guess it depends on her age.


  39. … that’s the problem with freedom, it brings responsibilities that did not exist when a slave.

  40. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    John Liesalot…you are such a lowlife.

    Are you not enjoying your freedom?


  41. Love it!!


  42. …. but then … I was never a slave!!


  43. Many people I know are slaves.

    Most can’t see beyond their noses nor can they think critically for themselves.

    So they live life happily as slaves to ignorance.


  44. Even slaves are happy!!

  45. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    You CANNOT clean up that one John Liesalot…you vomited last night what every parasitic scumbag halfassed minority racist on the island think and say about the majority Bkack population on the island……. the only Black slaves left in the west are the token ones like GP et al inexplicably mentally tied to racists like yourself….that is their own personally created enslavement.

    The last 2 generations of Blacks in the Caribbean do not know what it is to be physical slaves, but given the last 2 generations of racism practiced against them by you racist parasites living off them and their children’s backs, particularly in Barbados, I am sure they can appreciate, the intelligent ones anyway, that their once enslaved ancestors had a much more healthier appreciation than you could ever understand for their freedom from being slaves…..since you can boast that you and your ilk were never slaves….so how would you know how they felt being slaves and longing to be free.

    And since you so eloquently, efficiently and arrogantly compounded my suggestion that the majority black population not only have to close ranks against corrupt, abusive governments, but also definitely against you few thousand parasitic racists on the island who have been living off the Black population’s existence for over 50 years…..I can now rest my case.


  46. David Commissiong is on Brasstacks speaking with Sanka.Sanka wanted to know when Parliament is dissolved how would emergency measures be introduced.I am not surprised at that question.

  47. Dr. Simple Simon Avatar
    Dr. Simple Simon

    @John February 5, 2018 at 9:36 AM “Our foreparents were enslaved…As I have said before, thank God for that because had it not happened.”

    I cannot thank God for slavery, in any event my God is not the same as your god. I am not so brutal as to make light of the enslavement of millions of people, to make light of families who were forcibly separated, to make light of people whose children disappeared and were never seen again, to make light of people who lost their language and their religion.

    I thank my God that my greed for other people’s labour, and other people’s bodies has not so brutalized me that I cannot see Trans Atlantic as the brutal capitalist system that it was, a system built on the profits from other people’s labour and other people’s reproductive labour.

  48. Dr. Simple Simon Avatar
    Dr. Simple Simon

    @John February 5, 2018 at 11:49 AM
    Professor Woodville Marshallโ€™s book on the place names of Barbados has three parishes where there are no โ€œRock Hallsโ€… St. George.”

    https://www.barbadospropertysearch.com/for-sale/lot-1-2-rock-hall
    Land for sale at Rock Hall, St. George, Barbados


  49. So, Prof Marshall missed a parish …. know he did!!

    If you read his book you will realise he missed the simple truth on the foundation of Barbados, the BIBLE!!

    I reckon you will find a ROCK Hall in every parish, just like HOPE!!

    Reason is simplicity itself!!

    … once you understand what Barbados is!!

  50. Theophilius Gazerts 263 Avatar
    Theophilius Gazerts 263

    Jesus! John, if you get your way you will bring back slavery..

The blogmaster invites you to join and add value to the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading