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Submitted by Doc Martin

Once again, the occasion of a general election has surfaced the abysmal ignorance of the electorate about the workings of government. Indeed, if one stands back far enough, one will see that practical government and the perceptions and aspirations of the so-called “masses” operate in parallel universes, the two colliding every five years, for five minutes, in a polling booth. From this perspective, I submit, once again, that the first-level answer to the problems facing Barbados is a change in the character of the incoming government as I argued elsewhere.

DLP Failings
The DLP administration can justifiably be chastised for being slow off the bat to make so-called structural changes to the economy. Most of their first five years were spent apparently “relearning” the inner workings of the “modern” Barbados economy having been away from the seat of power for fifteen years. In their play for time, they were aided by their constant references to the truckload of debt left by the BLP and the worldwide, manmade recession which began around 2007.

In the last three years or so the Government did come up with embryonic plans (predicated on free IMF advice) to stabilize the economy but, as the IMF itself has well documented, lack of timely implementation has stymied the efforts and put the economy in further jeopardy. Perhaps, one of the greatest shortcomings of the DLP administration has been its inability to communicate with the population in terms that can be understood. There was also the ever-present temptation of nepotism, cronyism and sheer corruption which the administration could not resist. Of course, they do not have any monopoly on these sins, as the BLP would have us believe!

Parallel Universes
On page 61 of the 2015 budget, Chris Sinckler, the DLP’s Minister of Finance, made a very serious statement which, because of its importance and relevance, I reproduce here.

Mr. Speaker at present we seem to be caught in a vortex where we have a “Scandinavian” approach to the delivery of social services, where they generally are provided free at the point of delivery to all (universal access), while on the other hand, we appear to desire an Anglo-American approach to the issue of taxation where taxes are relatively low, and citizens clamour for ever lower taxes and tax exemptions.

It is in that dialectic: the aspirations of the masses vs. the penchant for unlimited freeness; the quest for benefits without bearing the fiscal costs; the clamour for rights vs. the willingness to bear the attendant responsibilities, that we find the parallel universe phenomenon which is at the root of the problems in Barbados and perhaps similar countries. And it is against this parallel universe concept that we should examine the sale of the Barbados Hilton.

Hilton on the Block
The BLP has made an election issue out of the sale and claimed that its plan to protest right outside the hotel has caused a halt to the negotiations on the sale. It claims this is a victory for the party; the naïve and the yard fowls will easily concur.

Successive Barbadian governments have failed to make the populace understand that the economic and financial principles of running a government are fundamentally the same as running a household. If a household’s earnings are less than what it spends it will have a “deficit” and have to borrow and if it over-extends itself in borrowing, it is only a short time before the debt collectors are knocking on its door! The fact that this is not understood is partly responsible for the parallel universe phenomenon.

A household can find financial ease if it has assets that can be used to generate income or sold to bring cash or, less preferably, used as collateral to obtain further credit. The sale of the Hilton should be viewed from this perspective.

Government is not, and should not be, in the business of running hotels per se. The Hilton is an asset held by government for the purpose of earning revenue; it is not a family heirloom that is inviolable. Given the dire straits in which it finds itself, the Government has chosen to sell the Hilton to bring much needed cash and possibly foreign exchange. At least this is the prima facie situation.

We can speculate or form conspiracy theories as to what else is going on. However, the objective fact is that the government needs the money. We might object to the price or even the terms of sale. If this is Ms. Mottley’s position, then we can support it. But there is always more in the mortar than the pestle! In this case, we suspect that Ms. Mottley is trying to earn political points and retaliate for the tax expose wrought upon her family by the DLP-Owen Arthur consortium; even that is understandable…to a point.

But, if the prima facie situation is what it is, then Ms. Mottley is being hypocritical because Bajan memories are not so short as not to remember the sale of the BNB (Barbados National Bank) to Trinidad by the last BLP administration of which she was a member.

Sale of government assets, when done for the right reason and in the right manner, is no more unethical or financially unsound than a household going about the sale of family assets, even heirlooms, to avoid bankruptcy or financial ruin. It is principled financial management and plain common sense!

Standby to Transport Aliens
It is time the masses started behaving like citizens rather than aliens, learn how government works and stop letting political parties exploit them because they are so naïve as to expect that government works any differently, fundamentally, from how they run (or should run!) their households. Then they will be in a position to critically evaluate the promises being made in this and any future election. But alas, this appears to be asking too much of a highly certificated but “uneducated” and alienated electorate. In that case the beam up is aborted!

Towards Proportional Representation
The foregoing should not be construed as an attempt to apologize for the DLP. On the contrary! In fact, I am not at all comfortable with a government made up solely of members of any one party be it BLP or DLP.

The moment is right in history for a government by coalition. To this end, the best thing the Barbados electorate can do at this time, is to ensure, in the absence of a system of proportional representation, that no one party makes up the incoming government of 2018. This it can do if a substantial portion of the electorate votes for members of a third party they feel have something worthwhile to contribute and at the same time, reject those of the major parties who have demonstrated incompetence, corruption or other malfeasances. I can think of at least three or four individuals across the current DLP administration and the BLP whom the electorate should sanction for these reasons.

Finally, if the electorate is so unhappy with how the older parties have been managing the people’s business in recent times, once this election is over, it needs to demand, by referendum, a change in the electoral system from the current first-past-the-post method to one based on proportional representation (with the added feature of recall!) which, all other things being equal, will always yield a coalition government.


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82 responses to “Sale of the Barbados Hilton and the Parallel Universe Phenomenon”


  1. The DLP administration can justifiably be chastised for being slow off the bat to make so-called structural changes to the economy. Most of their first five years were spent apparently “relearning” the inner workings of the “modern” Barbados economy having been away from the seat of power for fifteen years. In their play for time, they were aided by their constant references to the truckload of debt left by the BLP and the worldwide, manmade recession which began around 2007.

    This paragraph could be tweaked to reflect that the first two years 2008-2010 were affected by the sickness and subsequent death of David Thompson which created the ‘deer in headlights’ situation.


  2. So what? Barbados is BANKRUPT and must accept even an offer below market value. You call that emergency sale. Every international investor knows that.

    The next step is to sell Barbadians to Saudi Arabia or UAE, since all other assets are already sold out.


  3. Government is not, and should not be, in the business of running hotels per se. The Hilton is an asset held by government for the purpose of earning revenue; it is not a family heirloom that is inviolable. Given the dire straits in which it finds itself, the Government has chosen to sell the Hilton to bring much needed cash and possibly foreign exchange. At least this is the prima facie situation.

    Many are upset about the sale of the Hilton more along the lines at the lack of transparency. The system issue of dump public assets at deflated price to plug a leak.

  4. Are-we-there-yet Avatar
    Are-we-there-yet

    Doc Martin and the remaining DLP enthusiasts;

    Read, Learn and internally digest the youtube video below.
    It is by far the best speech in this election campaign.

  5. Are-we-there-yet Avatar
    Are-we-there-yet

    Doc Martin

    Your obfuscation of the huge leadership sins of the DLP regime must not be allowed to gain any traction.

    Again, Proportional Representation as a solution for the current situation is a putrid red herring.

    It cannot work now. The situation is much too urgent for that. Faint whisperings of possible slight wrongdoings by Stuart and his minions are not helpful at this juncture.

  6. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ David May 21, 2018 4:22 AM
    “Government is not, and should not be, in the business of running hotels per se. The Hilton is an asset held by government for the purpose of earning revenue; it is not a family heirloom that is inviolable. Given the dire straits in which it finds itself, the Government has chosen to sell the Hilton to bring much needed cash and possibly foreign exchange. At least this is the prima facie situation.”

    So why sell the Hilton to earn a mess of forex pottage to turn around and use the same forex to build a behemoth not far away called the Hyatt Erection?

    The question that both the DLP and Prof. Howard have to address is who would be financing the construction and outfitting of the Hyatt hotel in a so-called World Heritage site with all the special conditions contained therein.

    How can the building of the Hyatt hotel be a boost to the country’s foreign reserves unless it is being financed by investors with access to foreign money?

    Why not declare the source of this foreign money the same way in the interest of so-called transparency the DLP promises to declare the buyer of the Hilton hotel?

  7. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Doc Martin:
    “Perhaps, one of the greatest shortcomings of the DLP administration has been its inability to communicate with the population in terms that can be understood.”

    I wish to take ‘intellectual’ umbrage with that statement.
    There is no evidence to support your claim whereas there is ample on hand to dismiss it as having little grounding in electoral realities.

    The DLP has a way of communicating ‘convincingly with the majority of the population;
    much more so than its opponents.

    How easily you forget the role played by the “Little Old Lady on the Transport Board Bus” in convincing ‘the average Bajan on the bus to Martins Bay’ that ‘easy’ travel on that bus by the old pensioners and schoolchildren would no longer be freely available under a BLP privatization programme.

    Now which party is the ‘biggest’ advocate of Privatization as manifested in their actions in the sale of the BNTCL, Hilton hotel and its deliberate attempt to cannibalize (both financially and operationally) to the same Transport Board to make it a perfect entity for ‘cheap’ disposal to the existing private sector players in the same public transport industry.

    Didn’t Sweet-talking Stuart convince the new voters graduating from the BCC that a vote for the DLP would ensure their “Free” continuing tertiary education whereas a vote for the BLP under OSA would be nothing but a retrograde step leading to cul-de-sac for their hopes and aspirations?

    Didn’t Sinckler promise Bajans in every budget and economic recovery plan presented that there is a bright light at the end of the economic tunnel which would be reached, “shortly”? Now where is that bright light unless you see it in the hands of the IMF under the BLP?

    Which party is the one promising to the ‘common’ jingoistic man and xenophobic woman living in Eagle Hall that Barbados will be leaving the CCJ just because those ‘CCJ foreigner judges’ don’t like Bajans?

    If the DLP administration has a problem with the decisions made against the ‘unlawful’ acts of the Bajan government why did the same administration use the same Bajan people’s money to settle with Ms Myrie?

    Shouldn’t Ms Myrie be holding on for settlement all like now like the thousands of taxpayers awaiting their tax refunds or the myriad of creditors owed by the government?

    What about the many landowners whose properties were compulsorily acquired many moons ago but not a Bajan mickey mouse dollar has yet passed their way?


  8. Dont expect barbadian household to understand the micro-economics of running a country because a lot of them live lifestylyes away above their means
    The other half are convinced that saving their monies in financial institutions is an investment
    Barbadians too long have not understood the value of investing in their country but cry and belly ache when govts have to turn to foreign investors to pursue a path for financial security


  9. Weaving lies into “intellectual” discourse does not make lying more palatable. The sale of the Hilton is not the issue, it is, as David said earlier, the lack of transparency and the PRICE. The fact remains that during both the 2008 and 2013 elections the DLP lied to the electorate about privatisation. In 2008 this anti-privatisation stance was adopted even though David Thompson was involved in the sale of several government assets during the early 1990s; the party even fooled the gullible into believing that they could stop the sale of BS&T, a private company. Soon after being elected, however, the DLP in 2010 sold government’s remaining 27% shares in BNB–yes the Dems completed the sale of BNB. Fast forward to 2013 and the bus ad, and Estwick ranting about how the selling of BNTCL would be the action of a mad man. Yet the only thing standing between the sale of BNTCL to Sol by the DLP is the FTC. Bajans love to laugh at Americans for voting Trump, but we’ve Trumped since 2008. I am convinced tge Dems are not getting a favourable response on the ground and are desperately trying to Trump us again, with the likes if Doc Martin and Mark Jones.


  10. @Enuff May 21, 2018 8:32 AM

    “In 2008 this anti-privatisation stance was adopted even though David Thompson was involved in the sale of several government assets during the early 1990s; the party even fooled the gullible into believing that they could stop the sale of BS&T, a private company. Soon after being elected, however, the DLP in 2010 sold government’s remaining 27% shares in BNB–yes the Dems completed the sale of BNB”.

    Just goes to show you how conflicted both parties are and how much of a parallel universe we live in, no? Every government by either of the duopoly has used the sale of assets as political footballs. Unless language is leaving me, that is the point I am making! the same point you are making! Wherein lies the bias???

    @Enuff May 21, 2018 8:32 AM:

    “I am convinced tge (sic) Dems are not getting a favourable response on the ground and are desperately trying to Trump us again, with the likes if Doc Martin and Mark Jones.”

    If what you say above is true, then I think I AM achieving my true mission!!! which mission (though stated) still eludes you! Fear DOES have torment!


  11. @enuff

    Unfortunately because the BLP strategists are cared of the backlash from talk about privatization they cant exploit this on the political campaign trail as they ought to under normal circumstances.


  12. @Mariposa May 21, 2018, 7:41 AM

    Couldn’t agree with you more!


  13. @David May 20, 2018 9:41 PM

    “This paragraph could be tweaked to reflect that the first two years 2008-2010 were affected by the sickness and subsequent death of David Thompson which created the ‘deer in headlights’ situation”

    Point well taken David. I am obliged!

  14. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Doc Martin May 21, 2018 9:03 AM
    “@Mariposa May 21, 2018, 7:41 AM
    Couldn’t agree with you more!”

    Do you also agree that only a Hyatt built with foreign investment would make the sale of the Hilton hotel look like a sensible decision to take at this stage?

    Where would the forex be coming from to build the Hyatt hotel with 80-90% of its construction and furnishings inputs would be imported even the Rock Hard cement?


  15. “It is in that dialectic: the aspirations of the masses vs. the penchant for unlimited freeness; the quest for benefits without bearing the fiscal costs; the clamour for rights vs. the willingness to bear the attendant responsibilities, that we find the parallel universe phenomenon which is at the root of the problems in Barbados and perhaps similar countries”.

    This view reinforces the disinformation about the Barbadian economy which leads to unfounded conclusions being drawn and options which harm the working people of Barbados being presented as the only options available to the country.

    The wealth created by the workers and people of Barbados is the source of everything that comes out of the economy. The workers get their wages and salaries out of it, the corporations get their profits out of it, the moneylenders get their interest payments out of it and the government gets its revenue out of it. Therefore, there is no issue of “aspirations of the masses vs. the penchant for unlimited freeness”. The only question is whose claim on the created wealth gets priority treatment. Under the current political and economic arrangements, priority is given to the private interests, namely the corporations and moneylenders, while the workers who created the wealth and the government are pushed to the back of the line. The situation has become even more dire under the neo-liberal dogmas that are currently ruling the world. Now, even the government’s share of wealth is being funneled into the pockets of the private interests through debt repayments and outsourced contracts. Until Bajans grasp this reality, we will be unable to find a way out of our current situation.

  16. Freedom Crier Avatar

    THE MOST NEEDED SPEECH THAT WE COULD HEAR FOR THIS ELECTION

    Having listened to Grenville Philips 11, I am heartened that they are still people in Barbados that care enough for Barbados to put forward the Tried and True Policies that will stop us or our children and our children’ children from being Slaves trying to pay back the Debts of the B’s and the D’s.

    He is Not a Lawyer Politician he is an Engineer, his Solutions must be Practical with the aim of saving Barbados from the IMF whose primary aim is to protect the lender and also to protect us from the Crazy Policies of the B’s and the D’s.

    I hope everyone watches this Video and Choose who they want to lead them to get us out of this situation.

  17. Carlos Bourne Avatar

    Pure nonsense. In the last days of the Owen Arthur administration they were considering selling the Hilton. Check the last words of Noel Lynch , the then Minister of Tourism as he left that august chamber in response to David Thompson’s comments. Both parties are guilty of selling the nations assets even though they earn forex. whilst operating. They both need to go back to school. YOU DO NOT SELL ASSETS TO PAY FOR CURRENT EXPENDITURE. What will you have in the future when we get out of this existing situation. You can always repay a loan but you will never never get back those assets that were sold.It is a crime against the state.


  18. You can always repay a loan but you will never never get back those assets that were sold.It is a crime against the state.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Worse…..
    It is a crime against common sense – and against our grand children.
    Only wild animals take that approach….. and brass bowl idiots.


  19. Barbadians are a phony bunch of pretenders and reactioneries.
    How hard is it to understand the principle and rationale for selling an asset to save the nation national interest from being auctioned on the doorsteps of financial markets
    The fact being govts over the years have developed in the minds of barbadians an insatiable taste for freeness forcing govt to be providers for all and sundry even if it meant having to borrow as a means to end
    Well folks the bill has become due and unless manna falls from above which will not happen the govt have to find the finances to pay the debt
    As usual one would hear the long noise about transparency however the reality being that investors do not take kindly to having their business information openly placed in the public domain
    Most often the secrecy surrounds a principle to secure the asset and shut out any possible investors to counter offer


  20. There is also the symbolism of being able to defend national assets so that the psyche of a country’s people can be emboldened at successes achieved by those before. There must be a value attached to having achieved and then to defend ownership of it?


  21. David
    They don’t need to, because the evidence such as BNTCL is there for all to see.

  22. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ MariposaMay 21, 2018 10:36 AM
    “Barbadians are a phony bunch of pretenders and reactioneries.
    How hard is it to understand the principle and rationale for selling an asset to save the nation national interest from being auctioned on the doorsteps of financial markets
    The fact being govts over the years have developed in the minds of barbadians an insatiable taste for freeness forcing govt to be providers for all and sundry even if it meant having to borrow as a means to end”

    Well, well, so our multi- pussy ac has finally seen the light of Privatization and like Saul who became Paul is now the biggest advocate of that programme of divestment which OSA proposed as away of reducing the deficit but was soundly rejected at the ballot box.

    This business of selling off the family silver started under a DLP administration when Sandiford had to do it from way back in 1991-92.

    So Angela Skeete or Cox, what will it be? Privatization or continue to borrow to add to the “truckload” of burdensome debt left by the BLP over 10 years ago?


  23. @Tee White May 21, 2018 10:08 AM

    Notwithstanding your disagreement with the notion of “dialectic”, you have raised some very interesting points which, I hope you recognize, strike to the heart of some key intellectual questions of macro-economics, political philosophy, history and sociology. For example:

    Q1. What SHOULD be the economic relationship between the (Barbadian) “working class”, “investor class” and government?

    Q2. What IS the role of government?

    Q3. So what is the role of unions?

    Q4. And, how should society be “held together”?

    I don’t want to steer this discussion into some sterile, intellectual debate about the myriad of theories which have used to address these and related questions; theories such as liberalism, communism, free enterprise, conflict theory, consensus theory etc. I suspect / hope you are quite aware of these.

    Suffice it to say that in Barbados we have opted, with varying levels of consciousness and willingness, for:

    A mixed economy
    A political philosophy of DEMOCRATIC socialism
    A sociological theory of consensus

    These, unknown to many, are what is framing, and continues to frame, our discourse. Of course, in the real Barbadian society, none of the above exists in a pure form. In fact, our history can be seen as an attempt to wrestle with these issues/philosophies/choices and balance them against the backdrop of a post-colonial society which (post-colonial society) provides its own unique problems. Indeed the history of most other Caribbean states ( and their relative success /failure) can be seen as an attempt to calibrate these choices for their individual societies.

    But the fifth question (not stated above), that is most important, is this: What is the role of the individual citizen in all this?

    That is what we are grappling with, especially at this time. And that is why, as a transition measure, I am suggesting, even praying for, a coalition and that the citizens vote towards this end.

    This idea is yet to gain traction because if we examine ourselves ( e.g. the BU community) many are experiencing pre-separation anxiety; separation from the idea that only one party should form the next government. Yet no one has been able to present a better short-to-medium term solution for “change” for which some are clamouring! We are truly schizophrenic and the true colour of the election is really …shades of grey!

    The current dialectic is therefore, ANXIETY over separation from the idea of a de facto “one party” government and PARALYSIS over the uncertainty of an alternative, “untried” arrangement!

    Really though, who are we (armchair intellectuals?) fooling? The “masses” don’t care a rat’s claw about dialectics, theories and philosophies, even history. THEIR “philosophy” is the philosophy of the simple: less taxes, more money to spend, less thinking, more talk (read: “gossip”)! And, as you imply, the politicians are just loving it! Absolutely!

  24. Freedom Crier Avatar

    Tee White May 21, 2018 10:08 AM

    “The only question is whose claim on the created wealth gets priority treatment. Under the current political and economic arrangements, priority is given to the private interests, namely the corporations and moneylenders, while the workers who created the wealth and the government are pushed to the back of the line. The situation has become even more dire under the neo-liberal dogmas that are currently ruling the world. Now, even the government’s share of wealth is being funneled into the pockets of the private interests through debt repayments and outsourced contracts. Until Bajans grasp this reality, we will be unable to find a way out of our current situation.”

    We have found the answer to your dictums…VENEZEULA! Where workers run things and Entrepreneurs are cast aside. The Business in Venezuela is the Oil and it is run by the workers likewise so are Agricultural Lands are being worked by the workers.

    VENEZUELA, THE WORKERS PARADICE WHERE EVERYTHING IS BEING DONE IN THE NAME OF THE WORKER AND BY THE WORKER. The People in charge of the various Industries are hand-picked by Maduro himself.

    VENEZUELA, SUCH PROSPERITY ABOUNDS, to benefit the workers the grand sum of a monthly Salary that is worth the magnificent sum of 2$ US

    VENEZUELA Where Food is in Abundance, where the workers remember times when they had toilet paper, where shopping is as easy as going to the Garbage Cans where citizens are fleeing to less prosperous lands like Columbia, Brazil and even Trinidad.

    VENEZUELA, VENEZUELA, where the Nation’s health is great and the National Diet the Maduro causes everyone in Venezuela to Lose over 20 pounds last year alone. Venezuelans never had it so good. The Country with the largest known oil Reserves export less oil than it ever did.

    VENEZUELA, where supermarkets have now been taken over by the workers government, except, that the Shelves is Empty.

    Such untold blessings on Venezuela and on the workers of Venezuela and these blessing you are wishing for us in Barbados.

    Tee White you are in the company of Idi Amin Dada, Commie Sing Song and Castro they would proud of you.

    https://pics.me.me/venezuela-is-now-in-a-state-of-famine-dictatorship-32608846.png

  25. Freedom Crier Avatar

    HERE IS THE REALITY

    With these fundamentals now on the table, we may now keenly understand what American Spectator’s author J.T. Young succinctly points out:

    “The left’s inherent challenge is justifying their claim to what others own.” Hence they launch divisive disinformation campaigns pitting one against another, calling whatever they can’t control ‘unfair and undemocratic.’

    (See: Understanding the Left’s Demands on What Others Own, T.J. Young, The American Spectator, March 2013).

    “And they do this by hypocritically indicting Free Enterprise (Capitalism) or laissez faire economics as criminal. They claim that such a system is entirely unfair, wherein Government interference is kept at a minimum and free trade is generally allowed to be unregulated between individuals. They accuse such unrestrained Liberty as being the means by which the wholesale “theft” from society takes place. This gives them reason to limit personal freedom and aggressively denigrate the Liberties of personal initiative and creativity.

    Under the rubric of “You didn’t build that!” they feverishly claim that Society creates wealth, not individuals. Persisting in their lie, they insist that entrepreneurs are just those that steal or pirate the wealth rightfully belonging to others. According to their entrenched purview, everything that individuals may create or produce only occurs because of the governing that has made the means of wealth possible. They erroneously claim that every activity yielding a prosperous outcome belongs rightfully to everybody else.

    And thus their redistribution of wealth becomes the final arbitrator of fairness. In their view, no matter the individual endeavour, means or investment applied no one has the right to ownership of anything that somebody else does not have. Thus according to this half-baked paradigm, Marxist-Utopists hate Free-Enterprise Capitalism because it violates their sense of entitlement (‘fairness’ to them), accusing Capitalists of the three infamies they find most unforgiving. Namely, (1) the inequality of personal outcome which is derived from the interaction between (2) Free-Market economics and (3) personal independence, all of which they claim invariably leads to the greed and self-centeredness of materialism.”

    Thus they invalidate the most fundamental rights of man, the rights of ownership and personal property.” Correctly countering this selective perception, that, “Just as man can’t exist without his body, so no rights can exist without the right to translate one’s rights into reality — to think, to work and to keep the results — which means: the right of property…. Individual rights are not subject to a public vote; a majority has no right to vote away the rights of a minority; the political function of rights [and the Bill of Rights particularly] is precisely to protect minorities from oppression by majorities…and the smallest minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights, cannot claim to be defenders of minorities.”

    https://quotefancy.com/media/wallpaper/3840×2160/1709776-Ayn-Rand-Quote-The-smallest-minority-on-earth-is-the-individual.jpg


  26. No. No Miller dont see one sh.it endorsing the blp way of priivatization whereby their policy to privatize would be a fire sale action across the board that would impact on many households and most likely change the economic landscape of barbados in ways to benefit outside interest


  27. Bush Tea May 21, 2018 10:25 AM

    Absolute nonsense!

    The only crime there is…will be…is to have our children / grand children inherit a much degraded society occasioned by failure to take appropriate action when required, that is, NOW! What is your solution, anyway? Do you even have one? Do you have a vision for Barbados? We know you can criticize; I am not convinced that you can think logically AND practically! Please give us a solution?


  28. @ David re. Doc Martin May 21, 2018 11:39 AM

    The line ” A political philosophy of socialism” should read: “A political philosophy of DEMOCRATIC socialism” Can you make the change?

    Many thanks to the comments made by Freedom Crier May 21, 2018 11:49 AM re Venezuela because we have to recognize the not-so-subtle difference(s) between “democratic socialism” (the espoused philosophy of both BLP and DLP), and “pure socialism” / communism which is the philosophy driving Venezuela at this time.


  29. All economies depends on taxes. Productivity or investment as a true and tried formula for a healthy development of a country
    Those three factors can only be activated by citizens participation and to some extent by outside investment
    Barbados over the years has not been able to produce goods and services that at a greater level would impact overseas markets.
    Barbados therfore is limited to having to depend on a one nest basket along with foreign investment
    The long and short of the story being that if a country does not have the where withal to be self dependant whereby citizen participation by way of investment is involved helping to attribute to the economic health of the country
    The nations financial struggles would continue
    Barbadians for the most party want to have their cake and eat it too
    Very few if any look towards a future of developing a barbados for a true independence but have evolved into a society of self interest and country be dam


  30. Having heard the political speech of David Comissiong, of last night

    We must say, that we were amongst the first, in recent times, to refer to the ruling systems of Barbados as a ‘regime’

    And we were referring to them as such far before the DLP formed the ‘government’, long before

    We understand the government of Barbados, as not just the ruling party, but the parliamentary opposition as well, the duopoly.

    Indeed, we have also include a wide variety of elitist forces, the civil service and the corporate elites.

    A constellation of forces driving this country.

    For the DLP, in and of itself, cannot wield political power without all these other forces’ cooperating with it, in some way/s.

    We would not now here seek to deal with the internal contradictions, within Comissiong’s speech.

    Comissiong gave three (3) clear examples of dictatorial tendencies, which although not the most egregious we have seen over past decades, constitute behaviours highly inconsistent with perceptions about democracy.

    We however, fail to see any sets of scenarios where a BLP regime will be any different, or has in the past, been any different, than a DLP regime, as measured by any independent mind.

  31. Freedom Crier Avatar

    What is Democratic Socialism? What makes it different than regular Socialism? Has it been tried? Could it work in the United States? Comedian and political commentator Steven Crowder, host of Louder With Crowder, explains.

    Some Advocate Democratic Socialism, Is this the Future? Has it work in Barbados?

    Please Watch this Video for a Better Understanding…


  32. @Freedom Crier
    You sound like you are either a Klu Klux Klan supporter or a lover of Adolf Hitler as these are usually the most rabid anti-communists.

    Why are you so obsessed with Venezuela? Are you Venezuelan or Bajan? The United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP) Human Development Index (HDI) places Venezuela in 71st place out of the 188 countries on its list. This means that there are 117 countries ranked below Venezuela for human development and the overwhelming majority of these have the capitalist system. Explain that! Are you aware that the country with the fastest growing economy in the world is ruled by a communist party? In any event, the people in Venezuela seem to have a different opinion to you about the current government as they just voted them back into power. If you’re not a Venezuelan, my advice to you would be to leave the Venezuelan people alone let them sort themselves out and let us focus on Barbados.

    Your quotes from JT Young remind me of the arguments of the Barbadian slavemasters. The wealth produced by the labour of the slaves is ours because we were entrepreneurial enough to put them into slavery. Those calling for ending slavery are spreading division in society and attacking the must fundamental human right, namely the right to own private property, in this case our foreparents.

    To better reflect your actual views, I suggest you change your name to Slavery Crier.


  33. @Doc Martin
    In my opinion, the fundamental problem facing our country is that we have inherited the old political, economic, social and ideological system from the days of slavery and colonialism which was established to oppress the majority and we have run with it during the independence period. At a political level, this is reflected in the continuation of the system of ‘representative democracy’ which is neither representative or democratic and which functions to disempower and marginalise the masss of Bajans, whose only connection with this political power that rules over them is to collide with it “every five years, for five minutes, in a polling booth”.

    Without going into the history of the system of ‘representative democracy’ with its origins in the English civil war, we can draw a number of conclusions about it. First, the self sacrificing efforts of the masses of working people all over the world to make this system accountable to them through imposing universal suffrage on it have failed. Secondly, as a consequence, this system is in a crisis of legitimacy everywhere, even in its heartlands of the UK and USA.

    Therefore, we in Barbados, like people all over the world must give serious consideration to fnding an alternative that empowers ordinary people and actually turns into reality the slogan of government of the people, by the people and for the people. We can do so by breaking from Eurocentrism and the whole so-called Westminster model and by drawing on systems of democratic governance from all over the world. Your reference to consensus building struck me because this is a key principle of many traditional African systems of democratic governance. The current election campaign tells us that no such principle operates in our country’s political life. Instead we are following the adversarial Eurocentric concept which is everywhere in this system.

    Today, as far as I can see, the major challenge is for Bajans to begin a broad discussion about the kind of society we want an independent Barbados to be and the steps that will be needed to bring it about. This shouldn’t be an intellectual exercise but one that involves Bajans of all political persuasions and all walks of life.


  34. PMS (noun) – any of a complex of symptoms (including emotional tension and fluid retention) experienced by the Barbadian electorate (male and female) immediately before the day of election.

    Come May 24, 2018 you will have your chance to save Barbados from PMS.


  35. @Tee White

    When (if) we have that national conversation you ask- and we should- will anything different occur compared to when we held the Marshall Commission, Duffus Commission and of recent the White Paper on immigration etc. You get the drift?

  36. Freedom Crier Avatar

    Doc Martin you asked What is the Solution?

    Free Enterprise (Capitalism) leads to Prosperity and Freedom while Socialism leads to Poverty and Bondage! Capitalism doesn’t come with a warranty or “money back” guarantee. Yet, it encourages individuality, creativity, opportunity, risk taking, ambition, pride, dignity, and a sense of accomplishment, promotion, and provision. As much as Socialist professes their disdain for capitalism, they’ve yet to offer a better system. The reason is simple; it doesn’t exist.

    Capitalism is a made up word by Communist to describe “Free Enterprise and the use of Capital”. Free Enterprise, for it to be Free, must be Free of all encumbrances that will control it. Crony Capitalism, uses the word Capitalism in an effort to change the language from the word Free-remembering Capitalism = Free Enterprise. What we have pre-existing in the world is not Free Enterprise; Crony Capitalism is an attempt to label the System of Free Enterprise by regulating it until it is no longer Free. Free Enterprise (Capitalism) = Free Markets

    Cronyism is where big business and governments collude to give special favours to those entities to the exclusion of the ordinary person. Crony Capitalism is an attempt to label the System of Free Enterprise by regulating it until it is no longer Free.

    Capitalism has a new competitor, and its name is “shame.” The left is determined to make capitalism morally reprehensible. Cloaked in provocative terms like “income inequality,” wealth redistribution has become the popular economic philosophy in the world today, but it doesn’t hold a candle to capital…

    @ Tee Tree…There is Free Marker Enterprise (Capitalism) and Crony- Capitalism (Cronyism).

    Free Enterprise is not regulated by Endless Burdensome Regulations, brought about by Socialist Communism resulting in Crony- Capitalism! The law in a free society is only used for the protection of person and property—you cannot use the law as a tool for force and theft of property and labour, NO MATTER HOW GOOD THE INTENTION—this economic ideology of a “fair share” of another’s labour is the foundation for Fascism, Nazism, Socialism, and Communism. Using government to “help” individuals is NOT liberalism, it is at one level or another—only and ALWAYS Collectivism.

    https://thefederalistpapers.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/imageedit_827_2225403584.jpg

  37. Freedom Crier Avatar

    @Tee Tree…. How many times perfectly has Socialism/Communism been implicated all the things you advocate and it has failed. Do you have Any Basis in Reality to keep promoting this same Crap…Show us the Societies you want us to emulate?


  38. @Slavery Crier
    “Free Enterprise (Capitalism) leads to Prosperity and Freedom while Socialism leads to Poverty and Bondage!” This statement is demonstrably false.

    We do not need to review the whole history of the world to know that what you like to call so-called ‘free enterprise’, but which is actually more scientifically described in economic terms as capitalism, actually leads to extreme wealth at one end and poverty and bondage at the other end. If we take our country’s own history, the incontrevertible truth of this statement is clear. Barbados, following the capturing and enslaving of the indigenous people by the free enterprising Portuguese and Spanish capitalists was settled by the English free enterprising slave masters. In the mid 17th century, Barbados was considered one of the richest places on earth and many an English capitalist/free enterpriser made a fortune from our country. Throughout all this time of free enterprise the African majority were living in bondage and poverty. After 300 years of this free enterprise system in Barbados, the Moyne Commission appointed by the British government reported in the 1930s that malnutrition and poverty were rampant among Bajans of African descent and instead of enjoying freedom, we were languishing under an apartheid regime.

    Do you not even know this basic history of your own country? Just by being even slightly informed about our own country’s history, it is clear that your statement is false and baseless.


  39. Ironic that, contrary to what one might expect, some big names among Wall Street’s supposed dyed in the wool capitalists were apparently quite eager to finance the Bolshevik and Communist revolutionaries who were to launch the first large scale experiment in applied socialism.

    WALL STREET AND THE BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION
    By Antony C. Sutton

    Chapter I
    THE ACTORS ON THE REVOLUTIONARY STAGE

    Dear Mr. President:
    I am in sympathy with the Soviet form of government as that best suited for the Russian people…

    Letter to President Woodrow Wilson (October 17, 1918) from William Lawrence Saunders, chairman, Ingersoll-Rand Corp.; director, American International Corp.; and deputy chairman, Federal Reserve Bank of New York

    The frontispiece in this book was drawn by cartoonist Robert Minor in 1911 for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Minor was a talented artist and writer who doubled as a Bolshevik revolutionary, got himself arrested in Russia in 1915 for alleged subversion, and was later bankrolled by prominent Wall Street financiers. Minor’s cartoon portrays a bearded, beaming Karl Marx standing in Wall Street with Socialism tucked under his arm and accepting the congratulations of financial luminaries J.P. Morgan, Morgan partner George W. Perkins, a smug John D. Rockefeller, John D. Ryan of National City Bank, and Teddy Roosevelt — prominently identified by his famous teeth — in the background. Wall Street is decorated by Red flags. The cheering crowd and the airborne hats suggest that Karl Marx must have been a fairly popular sort of fellow in the New York financial district.
    Was Robert Minor dreaming? On the contrary, we shall see that Minor was on firm ground in depicting an enthusiastic alliance of Wall Street and Marxist socialism. The characters in Minor’s cartoon — Karl Marx (symbolizing the future revolutionaries Lenin and Trotsky), J. P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller — and indeed Robert Minor himself, are also prominent characters in this book.

    The contradictions suggested by Minor’s cartoon have been brushed under the rug of history because they do not fit the accepted conceptual spectrum of political left and political right. Bolsheviks are at the left end of the political spectrum and Wall Street financiers are at the right end; therefore, we implicitly reason, the two groups have nothing in common and any alliance between the two is absurd. Factors contrary to this neat conceptual arrangement are usually rejected as bizarre observations or unfortunate errors. Modern history possesses such a built-in duality and certainly if too many uncomfortable facts have been rejected and brushed under the rug, it is an inaccurate history. On the other hand, it may be observed that both the extreme right and the extreme left of the conventional political spectrum are absolutely collectivist. The national socialist (for example, the fascist) and the international socialist (for example, the Communist) both recommend totalitarian politico-economic systems based on naked, unfettered political power and individual coercion. Both systems require monopoly control of society.

    SNIP

    In brief, this is a story of the Bolshevik Revolution and its aftermath, but a story that departs from the usual conceptual straitjacket approach of capitalists versus Communists. Our story postulates a partnership between international monopoly capitalism and international revolutionary socialism for their mutual benefit. The final human cost of this alliance has fallen upon the shoulders of the individual Russian and the individual American. Entrepreneurship has been brought into disrepute and the world has been propelled toward inefficient socialist planning as a result of these monopoly maneuverings in the world of politics and revolution.

    This is also a story reflecting the betrayal of the Russian Revolution. The tsars and their corrupt political system were ejected only to be replaced by the new powerbrokers of another corrupt political system. Where the United States could have exerted its dominant influence to bring about a free Russia it truckled to the ambitions of a few Wall Street financiers who, for their own purposes, could accept a centralized tsarist Russia or a centralized Marxist Russia but not a decentralized free Russia. And the reasons for these assertions will unfold as we develop the underlying and, so far, untold history of the Russian Revolution and its aftermath.4

    https://www.voltairenet.org/IMG/pdf/Sutton_Wall_Street_and_the_bolshevik_revolution-5.pdf


  40. @Tee White May 21, 2018 8:20 PM

    “@Slavery Crier
    “Free Enterprise (Capitalism) leads to Prosperity and Freedom while Socialism leads to Poverty and Bondage!” This statement is demonstrably false.”

    You are right here. This is a gross over-simplification!
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    @Tee White May 21, 2018 8:20 PM

    “After 300 years of this free enterprise system in Barbados, the Moyne Commission appointed by the British government reported in the 1930s that malnutrition and poverty were rampant among Bajans of African descent and instead of enjoying freedom, we were languishing under an apartheid regime.”

    I am not sure this is what is meant by ” free enterprise”! As you state, our forefathers at that time were not enjoying “freedom”. “Free enterprise” in your scenario meant free enterprise for a certain class of society. In other words, you can’t participate in “free enterprise” if you are NOT FREE! Slavery Crier has it confused: it should be that freedom mixed with free enterprise CAN lead to prosperity;

    Freedom is a necessary but not a sufficient for condition for prosperity under “free enterprise”. If individuals do not have access to capital, their ability to practice free enterprise will be severely limited. This is where my reference to democratic socialism in Doc Martin May 21, 2018 11:39 AM cuts across the “free enterprise” debate.

    So the questions for me are:

    Q1. What is the difference between democratic socialism and socialism / communism (if any)?

    Q2. How have successive Barbadian governments practised social democracy?

    Q3. To what extent have the policies of such governments allowed individuals to acquire the means and infrastructure to participate in free enterprise?

    But I’ll leave the answer to these for another posting.


  41. “Successive Barbadian governments have failed to make the populace understand that the economic and financial principles of running a government are fundamentally the same as running a household.”

    Could the author please explain the above comment?

    “But, if the prima facie situation is what it is, then Ms. Mottley is being hypocritical because Bajan memories are not so short as not to remember the sale of the BNB (Barbados National Bank) to Trinidad by the last BLP administration of which she was a member.”

    To be fair, the author is being untruthful by stating the Owen Arthur administration sold BNB to Republic Bank.

    Firstly, BNB was not entirely owned by the Barbados government. In 2003, the Arthur administration and other shareholders sold 57% of the bank’s shareholding to Republic Bank. RB subsequently acquired 8.14% of “non government” shares, thereby increasing their shareholding to 65.14%.

    Of the remaining 34.86% shares, the Barbados government owned 28%, which was sold by the Thompson administration in 2012.

    The author writes to give the “illusion” that he is being “fair and balanced.” However, it is clear his bias is towards the DLP. And the resident DLP yard-fowl Mariposa agreeing with his comments is enough evidence to support this observation.


  42. “Barbadians too long have not understood the value of investing in their country but cry and belly ache when govts have to turn to foreign investors to pursue a path for financial security.”

    Mariposa

    Political yard-fowls never cease to amaze me.

    It is interesting that you wrote the above comment, but when Owen Arthur said land should attract its highest economic value (in terms of investment), you and the DLP accused him of “selling land on the West Coast to foreigners.”

    But knowing you, you will try to tell us that there is a difference between foreign investment facilitated by the BLP and facilitated by the DLP.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    “……….whereby their policy to privatize would be a fire sale action across the board that would impact on many households and most likely change the economic landscape of barbados in ways to benefit outside interest.”

    Were you smoking Vincy weed when you wrote that shiite?

    So…… are you essentially disagreeing with the Fair Trading Commission’s ruling that your administration should sell a percentage of BNTCL to the French owned RUBIS?


  43. @Artax

    You are correct, however, we all understand what Doc Martin means i.e. the majority holding in the Barbados National Bank was sold to Republic.

  44. Freedom Crier Avatar

    You have still not learnt the difference between Crony-Capitalism and Free Enterprise Capitalism.

    Free Enterprise extols the virtue of an individual and the society is geared towards the protection of each individual including minorities. And the smallest minority is the individual. Crony Capitalism exists in Socialist states where big companies knowing the nature of their Socialist government and knowing their leaning towards always wanting more money, lobby and collude with governments to gain an unfair advantage over their Competitors for market share using Regulations to hamper smaller Businesses (not Free Market).

    How is Free Enterprise “Capitalism” Better than Socialism?

    The essential nature of Free Enterprise Capitalism is social harmony through the pursuit of self-interest. Under Capitalism, the individual’s pursuit of his own economic self-interest simultaneously benefits the economic self-interests of all others. In allowing each individual to act unhampered by government regulations, Capitalism causes wealth to be created in the most efficient manner possible which ultimately raises the standard of living, increases the economic opportunities, and makes available an ever growing supply of products for everyone. The free-market operates in such a way so that as one man creates more wealth for himself, he simultaneously creates more wealth and opportunities for everyone else, which means that as the rich become richer, the poor become richer. It must be understood that Capitalism serves the economic self-interests of all, including the Non-Capitalists. “And even if we were all magically made equal in wealth tonight, we’d be unequal in the morning because some of us would spend it and some of us would save it”. Lawrence Reed.

    A Capitalist Society is a just society because all individuals are considered equal under the law. Free Market Capitalism recognizes that it is just for a man to keep what he has earned and that it is unjust for a man, or group of men, to have the right to what other people have earned. Since all people must live independently under Capitalism, all of the material values that a person acquires must be earned. Thus, the expression of social justice under Capitalism is that what a man earns is directly proportional to what he produces, no progressive income taxes stifling his achievement for the sole fact the he did achieve. All other forms of government, such as the welfare state, institutionalize injustice by legally expropriating the property of some men and giving it to others.

    “Contrary to widely held beliefs, capitalism is not a system which exploits a large portion of society for the sake of a small minority of wealthy capitalists. Ironically, it is actually socialism that causes the systematic exploitation of labour. Since the socialist state holds a universal monopoly on labour and production, no economic incentive exists for the socialist state to provide anything more than minimum physical subsistence for the workers except to perhaps prevent riots or revolutions. Exploitation is inherent to the nature of socialism because individuals cannot live for their own sake, rather, they exist merely as means to whatever ends the socialist rulers—the self-proclaimed spokesman of “society,” may have in mind.”

    http://www.earstohear.net/images/TSowell-Greed.jpg

  45. Freedom Crier Avatar

    One of the Two Most Richest Men in the world has donated their wealth to a foundation for Philanthropic causes, so much for the evil rich people. They are rich people in Barbados who do Charitable works quietly.

    https://i.pinimg.com/736x/d8/0a/a9/d80aa99cec21a2cf5a2121e7402622d1.jpg

  46. Freedom Crier Avatar

    Socialism when it has run its course in Every Nation Does Not End Well, It Cannot, It Brings As Its Fruit Misery, Poverty, Breakdown In Law And Order etc.

    Look around you, you live here do you remember a better time for Barbados if you do was Business Flourishing? Did people try to live a better life? Now we have More Socialism are We Flourishing? Remember Socialism is not Christian it Masquerades as Godlike but it is the Ideology formed in hell and its fruits are what we see in the countries like Venezuela & Cuba of Repression & Tyranny.

    Learn to Recognise Socialism for what it Truly Represents… It is the Death Spiral; Socialism is the Big Lie of the twentieth and twenty-first Centuries. While it Promised Prosperity, Equality, and Security, it delivered Poverty, Misery, and Tyranny.

    Is Socialism /Communism the Ideology You Advocate?

    https://www.facebook.com/AwakenToOurAwfulSituation/photos/a.558430594173602.96784034.558017127548282/1307029392647048/?type=3&theater


  47. David BU

    If you and the “liker” interpreted Doc Martin’s comment re the last BLP administration SOLD the BNB to Republic Bank………

    ……….to mean “……..the MAJORITY HOLDING in the Barbados National Bank was sold to Republic…….

    ………then……………..what can I say?


  48. @Doc Martin
    The concept of free enterprise is unscientific and has been invented for the sole purpose of attempting to create confusion about the workings of the capitalist system. However, this system has been studied and analysed in great detail and there is absolute clarity about how it works.

    At its heart is the exploitation of the many by the few. In other words, the capitalist system always entails a minority living off the labour of the majority. This is why it invariably leads to concentration of wealth at one pole and poverty at the other. You may have seen the recent report that the 8 richest people in the world now own as much wealth as the world’s poorest 3.5 billion people. It is impossible for this system to work without coercion, which in fact cuts across human freedom, becauuse given a genuine choice, people will never agree to having the fruit of their labour stolen from them to be enjoyed by someone else.

    This coercion can come in the form of the open slavery that was practised in Barbados for over 200 years or in the form of the veiled slavery that that has followed it. The coercion comes via the fact that the majority have no access to capital and can only survive by selling their labour power. Wherever capitalism is established, the capitalist state has to use coercion to create a large enough group of people who have no alternative to selling their labour power if they want to survive. An example from the introduction of capitalist agriculture into East Africa by the British colonialists should make my point clear. At that time, in this regon most traditional societies considered the idea that land could be privately owned as being as ludicrous as the atmosphere that we breathe being privately owned. Land was considered a gift from nature that everyone had a right to access in order to secure their own existence and that of their families. Therefore people tilled land with the help of their families in order to provide for themselves. At harvest time if the volume of work was too much for the family to manage, the social expectation was that neighbours would help them with the clear understanding that they would receive help in turn when they needed it.Therefore, people lived by the sweat of their brow without exploiting anyone. This is the only context in which you could speak of freedom and free enterprise since these people were working for themselves and so were masters of their own destiny.

    After violently imposing themselves on the people of this area, the British decided to inrtroduce capitalist plantation agriculture there. First they passed laws which established private ownership of the land. However, they were stil left with the problem of how to find labour for the plantations, since the Africans had no interest in being exploited by the colonialists when they could till their own land. To solve this problem, the British colonial administration introduced a head tax on the Africans which could only be paid in the currency issued by the British. Failure to pay the tax resulted in arrest and imprisonment. In other words, coercion was used to force people to become agricultural labourers. There are endless examples of the use of coercion to force people to become exploited workers within the capitalist system, from the coercion of open slavery to the veiled coercion of hunger and destitution.

    The so-called free enterprise system is fundamentally based on the dialectical relationship between freedom and wealth for the owners of capital and coercion/bondage and poverty for the majority.

  49. Freedom Crier Avatar

    @ Doc Martin…If one Desires Freedom one has to look to the God of Providence Not to the State as the Shepherd!

    A new type of superstition has got hold of people’s minds, the worship of the state. People demand the exercise of the methods of coercion and compulsion, of violence and threat. Woe to anybody who does not bend his knee to the fashionable idols!

    Freedom is indivisible. As soon as one starts to restrict it, one enters upon a decline on which it is difficult to stop.

    This is the difference between Slavery and Freedom. The slave must do what his superior orders him to do, but the free citizen-and this is what freedom means-is in a position to choose his own way of life.

    Exerts from The Ten Commandments Versus The Ideology Of Socialism …

    • I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. You shall have no other gods before Me.

    Socialist Version: The Government is your sovereign, almighty and supreme, which raised some of you from the ranks of citizens, lavished you with riches, privileges, and power, granted you immunity from prosecution, and rendered you secure in your lives for the rest of your days. You shall worship no other sovereigns before the government.

    • You shall not steal.

    Socialist Version: You may take as much property from others as you can, through taxation, confiscation, or administrative extortion, while sympathizing with rampaging mobs, looters, and destroyers of property and neighborhoods, all the time justifying your actions as striving for social justice.

    • You shall not covet your neighbor’s house; you shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, nor his male servant, nor his female servant, nor his ox, nor his donkey, nor anything that is your neighbor’s.

    Socialist Version: You may covet anything that is your neighbor’s, by dividing your country into groups based on race, religion, creed, ethnicity, class, gender, and other useful categories, and creating invidious comparisons among them, pitting all citizens against each other, the better to exalt the power of government to covet the goods and honor of everyone in the country.

    A summary of these commandments according to Socialist/ Communist like Commie Sing Song, Tee Tree and ILK is that you must worship the state with all your heart, mind, and soul, and love yourselves as well, in order better to proclaim your moral superiority over the vast majority of the country’s inhabitants, endeavoring always to reduce them to the status of your subjects, servile, obedient, and helpless.

    Where Do You Stand Doc Martin?

    https://vesteaevangheliei.files.wordpress.com/2012/10/cele-10-porunci1.jpg


  50. @Atax

    He was interpreted to mean that under Arthur the government’s controlling interest was relinquished. In a loose way Bajans generally internalized this as the national bank being controlled by the Trinis. As earlier stated tour position is technically correct.

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