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Small daily improvements over time lead to stunning results.

I begin this article by congratulating the 2018 Barbados scholarship and exhibition winners. The bar was set very high and the tasks before these 55 studious youth were challenging, yet they accomplished through sacrifice and determination. These teenagers clearly demonstrated that discipline is an essential ingredient for clearing the tallest hurdles and ultimately reaping success. Indeed, it was their aplomb, dedication, and the commitment to strive for excellence that they engendered habit-forming traits and created new personal norms for themselves. The sterling achievements of these winners are likely to be influential for the next set of students who will see their success as moments of inspiration.

For the older observers within the Barbadian society, you now have a group of young people that can be emulated. These scholarship and exhibition winners have essentially shared with the public, lessons for being able to face challenges head-on, while reaching standards of excellence and winning! Their full potential and rewards may remain unknown for years to come, but in the interim, they have built reservoirs of self-confidence that will help them wade through other challenges which shall no doubt emerge. Hence, I encourage all Barbadians – young and matured – to draw on the pride and industry that goes into โ€˜building the best Barbados togetherโ€™. Particularly, I invite the Government of Barbados to take comfort in the view that the aims of the nation must be set sufficiently high as to bring out the best in our people.

The public is listening and watching. Instructively, it is with both hope and caution that there is a sense that the relatively new Barbados Government, under the leadership of the Honourable Prime Minister Mia Mottley, commits to the task of attaining high standards of governance in every meaningful endeavour. Surely, the Barbados Government has a special role to play in setting and achieving high standards of excellence. This means bringing about positive transformation in the public sector and in the society. It means engaging the society to reach optimal levels of governance, if the Barbados nation is to claim success. As Bonnie Blair a former USA speed skater once said, โ€œwinning doesn’t always mean being first. Winning means you’re doing better than you’ve ever done before.โ€ So that with every stroke of a new initiative, with every formula for attaining growth and national development, Barbados must work towards being better than the previous day or period.

Equally crucial, the Government as a guarantor of public values, must endeavour to inspire, encourage, and facilitate the types of feats that transform and empower lives for the better. Much is expected from those with a legitimate mandate to set policy, pursue programmes, and meet performance goals. Government must set the benchmark whereby, the citizens as well as businesses and non-governmental organizations are given ample opportunity to improve. Central to personal and national improvement is increased civic participation combined with active involvement of our youth. From generation to generation, Barbadians must strive to become important public problem-solvers and national winners. The 55 students proved that high bars can create the zest in a nation for success.

Therefore, a crucial point of continuation for the Mottley-led administration now that the vision has been laid out, goals set, and standards elevated, must be the direct shift away from complacency. The governing and the governed must move towards embracing positives and creating the atmosphere in which valued norms, uplifting attitudes, and desirable actions are common rather than one-off experiences. Barbadosโ€™ entire governance framework must go beyond mere legislation and begin to formulate and shape agendas for national success. As demonstrated by the scholarship and exhibition winners, acts of behaviour must be tightly entwined to the desired outcomes. This simply means that the society should repeatedly do positive habit-forming things so that they too can carve winning paths regardless of the challenges.

The national consciousness in Barbados must be shepherded to attain and surpass standards of excellence in all our procedures and practices. Also, the mechanisms that are geared for success ought to be conducive for fostering national integrity. In other words, the Barbados Government apparatus must be strong and nurtured by a culture of truth, courage, and ethical behaviour in and outside the parameters of the Government. High standards and national goals are straddled when we ensure that integrity matters in shaping the national character of Barbados. Integrity comes alongside other attributes such as confidence and persistence in nation-building. Certainly, it matters what becomes engrained as a national culture in the pursuit of excellence.

There are also the elements of efficiency, accountability and effectiveness that must be consistently visible in governmental performances and actions. Government must be the example-setter and, the standards that are set for the governed, should be more than political optics. The governance framework must translate the ambitions of a nation wherein everyone can realise his or her responsibility for contributing to national development. The distinguished economist Joseph Stiglitz argues that โ€œgovernment is supposed to act in the interests of citizens.โ€ Leadership in the Barbados Government must be sufficiently determined to work assiduously so that the peoplesโ€™ expectations are reasonably met.

The successful scholarship and exhibition winners demonstrated their inclination for multi-tasking while keeping their eyes on the coveted prize of goal-attainment. Despite the standards were high and required effort and commitment, it was by using their diverse methods, compromising with friends, appreciating the support of parents and guardians which sealed their eventual triumph. Surely, the standards of excellence that the Barbados nation wants to achieve must be reachable and not left to dither or become elusive due to indifference and ill-discipline. Decisiveness, timeliness, and technological advance can make positive differences to anticipated outcomes.

Again, the scholarship and exhibition winners have stories to share that can inspire many to reach for personal and national success. On the ball is the Minister of Education, Miss Santia Bradshaw who noted that โ€œthe numbers, while they are increasing,โ€ indicate that โ€œthe students are working hard. They have something to work towards.โ€ย Hence, the power of the Barbados Government and how the Cabinet utilises its distributive and incentive tools should augur well for national development.

In fact, Miss Bradshaw in speaking for her Cabinet colleagues and bearing in mind possible increases associated with scholarship and exhibition winners, advised that they are โ€œprepared to make allowances for the increases because we recognise the importance of education to development of the country.โ€ I would argue that the Mia Mottley-led Cabinet has zeroed in on the importance of investing in the nationโ€™s youth and for allowing opportunity to meet ambition. There is now a purposeful effort to reclaim the lost ground that was ceded in the last decade. The winning students showed that aptitude is key for scaling high bars.

Dr George C. Brathwaite is a political consultant and former lecturer in Political Science. Email: brathwaitegc@gmail.com).

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113 responses to “The George Brathwaite Column – Scaling High Bars”

  1. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    What’s the sense of raising โ€˜humanโ€™ robots to regurgitate academic stuff only to live in an ever expanding pigpen for garbage and filth called Barbados?

    Why are the taxpayers ‘educating’ children to become environmental terrorists camouflaged in plastic with Chefette and KFC containers their main weapon of destruction to public sanitation?

    Where is the ROI from the billions spent over the years in providing โ€œfree tertiaryโ€ education to those growingly overly obese brats who believe that the environment is a battlefield for littering and despoiling it is a badge of honour to be worn with national pride?

    When this so-called academic brilliance is reflected in an improved state of the countryโ€™s environment then kudos of the highest grade would be ungrudgingly awarded with distinction.

    Why not offer scholarships and exhibitions also to those who can demonstrate a love and commitment to a healthy and clean Barbados?

    Why not start with the Capital called rundown dirty smelly Bridgetown which has become nothing but a massive turnoff to cruise ship visitors?

    Instead of educating so many people to become medical doctors (ex post facto health technicians) and even those with PhDs, why not send a few to places like Singapore, Bermuda and Canada to study how the residents of those jurisdictions โ€˜treatโ€™, proactively and preventatively, to the management of the environment and public sanitation accordingly?


  2. Several of the scholarship and exhibition winners will be pursuing mechanical engineering, environmental science, medicine and other science disciplines, the challenge we have is unlocking that learning to drive national strategic interest.


  3. And hopefully at least one of the graduates takes up waste management and returns to Barbados to design, build, operate and maintain a functioning sewage system, too much to ask no doubt.


  4. @Wily

    The issue is not the scholars returning because they are bonded, it is the ethos to create opportunity.


  5. @George,

    I find it rather odd that the CXC exams have recently been published and 11000 school leavers in the region left school without any qualifications. That is, after 11 years of mandatory education they failed to reach the basic standard to be awarded a certificate in any subject. Is this a crisis.
    I would have thought that anyone who really cares for the level of education in Barbados would be ken to find out the Barbados share of this collective regional failure; which schools are the main offenders? And, how can we remedy this awful failure. Our national educational policy must start at the bottom – nursery, infant, primary, secondary – and not at the level of scholarships for an elite.
    If we start spending with the September intake, within 11 years we will see the outcomes. Ms Bradshaw give the impression of being level-headed and I hope she is her own woman in making policy. Keep the Chinese man at a distance.


  6. Scholarships ?

    Solar engineering technologists.

    Industrial design.

    Information technology technicians.

    Commercial greenhouse farming.


  7. Does the government see value in updating and maintaining their websites ?

    https://www.barbadosintoronto.com/the-barbados-consulate.html


  8. @Hal Austin

    Have you ever heard the saying “One can lead the horse to water but you cannot make it drink”? These scholarship winners have had no special advantage over every other young person in Barbados EXCEPT THE FAMILY THEY WERE BORN INTO. Their families are not particularly materially well off or possessing of exceptional talents or were fortunate to escape the vicissitudes of ill health or personal struggle of one kind or another.


  9. They is saying in the UK that goes like this-

    C students employ A students and B students work for the Govt


  10. The solution to the poor academic performance of many our children, I suspect, does not lie in the hands of Ms Bradshaw and her associates in the Ministry of Education but may lie in the hands of the entertainers and the purveyors of popular culture. On reflection, given Ms Bradshaw is the attorney/manager of the some of the same entertainers, she may be useful after all.


  11. @ Ping Pong

    that is quite funny but true. we dont seem to acknowledge how popular culture influences our young people.


  12. Ping Pong
    August 14, 2018 9:17 AM

    @Hal Austin
    Have you ever heard the saying โ€œOne can lead the horse to water but you cannot make it drinkโ€? These scholarship winners have had no special advantage over every other young person in Barbados EXCEPT THE FAMILY THEY WERE BORN INTO. Their families are not particularly materially well off or possessing of exceptional talents or were fortunate to escape the vicissitudes of ill health or personal struggle of one kind or another.

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

    Bingo!!!

    Go to the head of the class.

    Regarding our entertainers I seem to recall a time when a former Ministress of Education who shall remain nameless promoted Edwin as the role model for our youth and bussed in a whole set of student to the Gymnasium(?) so they could listen to the master hisself!!


  13. It is all about discipline, only a rare few will be so naturally gifted as not to need a strong family unit behind them!!


  14. โ€ฆ and that’s why practically all of the longlived businesses in this country and worldwide will have been at one time, family undertakings!!

    Came across this example in the hospitality industry!!

    https://www.travelchannel.com/interests/history/photos/10-of-the-worlds-oldest-hotels

    “According to the Guinness World Records, the oldest hotel in the world is Nishiyama Onsen Keiunkan. This ryokanโ€”a traditional Japanese innโ€”has been owned by a whopping 52 generations of the same family. Founded in 705 AD, famous guests have included Tokugawa Ieyasu, the Land of the Rising Sun first shogun, and Kouken, its 46th emperor.”


  15. The problem about trying to discuss serious policy issues with Bajans is that they always seem ignorant of what is happening in the wider world. For decades we have been having these problems in London schools, against intense resistance from the teachers’ unions. London now outperforms the rest of the country, and black girls outperforms their peers.(read the Swann Report on racism on British schools).
    School children spend more time with teachers than with their parents. Parents have a duty to teach their children morality; teachers to educate them. Education is not a problem in Barbados because the children of the wealthy and well-connected get through; if they do not get national scholarships they get their tuition fees paid by taxpayers.
    @John, it has nothing to do with ‘discipline’, but with good teaching.


  16. I join with Mr. Brathwaite in congratulating the 2018 Scholarship and Exhibition winners.
    My wish for them is every success in their personal and higher education endeavours.

    I take this opportunity to remind us all about the thousands of great young people we are Blessed to have in Barbados who strive for and achieve excellence in many areas. Let us be wise enough to give them a chance; to listen attentively to what they have to say and graciously accept their contributions to the present and further growth of our island home, remembering that wisdom embraces more than age and years in a job doing the same ONE thing over and over for decades.

    It would be great to see some young faces on the many Boards spread over the landscape. This shifting the same people from Board to Board is a solid waste of time and money. Yearly Reports of their achievements on the Boards should be a must.

    On another matter:

    (1) Neither the General Manager nor the Financial Comptroller of the Barbados Water Authority have acknowledge my repeated(Since January) requests for compensation as a result of financial losses resulting from relocating due to Sewage problems on the South Coast.(Also in my yard).I live downwind from the swamp.

    BWA is still billing me Sewage charges having disconnected me from the system in Mid March. Repeated requests are ignored. I also asked for a Sewage charged credit covering fifteen months when NO water was used. No response since January.

    I called, about 1 and 2, the office of Minister Abrahams and was referred to that of Mr. R. Thorne, the Christ Church South Representative. I then email information about my Sewage related plight to both and also to Minister Duguid about 9 or 10 days ago. No response to date.
    I see Minister Abrahams updating the public about the Sewage woes and visiting the sites,he appears to be genuinely concerned. I hope this concern embraces those like yours truly who have been faced with stumbling block after stumbling block trying to get some help which should have been offered and not futilely sought.
    I am hoping that the reality is far from what I am hearing.”D rubbin shoulders dun- dey got d X.”

    Yet Another Matter:

    Water running in the streets for six or more days. Is it not possible for the BWA to have persons traversing the island to look out for this wastage and have it stopped? What about putting a stop to Government workers cleaning their cars at work and adding to the waste of this precious resource?

    Blessings to all.


  17. I agree with Miller. Barbadian education did not pay out if you compare the data on debt, growth and everything else to other islands in the Caribbean. Gov spent billions in education to produce titles for the rubbish bin. Just look at the number of lawyers in Bim. Now approx. 1,100 souls but none is qualified to become a judge at the CCJ. What a disaster.

    And why is it so? As Miller pointed out, the Barbadian secondary and tertiary education fails to implement the common sense and – I would like to add – other virtues like discipline, self-reliance and modesty. Instead, the Barbadian system produced arrogant, inefficient, dependent and lazy academics who talk too much, feel “entitled” and who think that working 40 hours per week is some kind of “crime against humanity”. And all these so-called academics want their job at the big Barbadian deep state instead of becoming businessmen and businesswomen.

    In other words, the local education is the root of the whole desaster. Just look at Simpson, Baloney, COW, Bizzy and Jerkham. They might lack the formal “education” but they possess the key skills you need for business like cynisism, ruthlessness and persistence. They are also great sociologists who exploit the weakness of their “learned” Barbadians. Business is no prayer of the church.

    I would like to see a school and university in Barbados who prepares children and young adults for real life.


  18. Hal,

    what would be your corrective recommendations?


  19. @Mr Austin

    Wasn’t Barbados named in a list of the 10 best education systems globally?
    Teacher’s from the UK have visited Barbados to understand what is done here and to replicate it in the UK.


  20. About what?


  21. Ping Pong,

    Come on, wake up? Where does Barbados come on the PISA list? How many patents have we registered since independence? Remind me how many scholars and academics have been published in overseas peer-reviewed publications since independence? Apart from Mr Emptage, where are our leading regional designers and inventors? I can go on. We have an over-supply of second-rate lawyers with LECs for a very small catchment area. A qualification that is useless outside CARICOM.


  22. How does one implement corrective action in a failed state?


  23. Tron

    You expect a teacher to instill modesty, self reliance and discipline in your children?! Good luck with that. BTW all four of your heroes attended a Barbadian secondary schools. Furthermore Bizzy and Bjerkham have degrees from ..surprise surprise… UWI (St.Augustine).


  24. This statement is so true. We accept that Barbados is an open economy vulnerable to exogenous shocks but the same argument is set aside when evaluating the downside to so-called cultural penetration.


  25. Sorry Mr Austin

    I cannot join you in your self loathing. Barbados does not participate in the PISA evaluation and I would not speculate on where we would fall. That said, it is my belief that you can design the best school system in the world, the students would still fail if they are not interested in what is being offered. Tell me which school Thomas Edison attended. He had over 1000 patents in his name.


  26. Hal, Discipline is the lynch pin for all concerned.

    1 Govt needs to set the example by encouraging students to study courses that the island truly requires, not areas where we might lose the student to foreign lands or to a degree that is close to useless ie there should be areas where there are increased bonuses . Leaders should lead responsibly and directly so our small island does not continue to waste precious resources especially in the current situation financially. Govt also needs to attract Corporations and entrepreneurs that can create Jobs in targeted sectors that we can dominate in. Hants has highlighted some sectors worth pursuing.

    2 Teachers need to guide students into areas that produce for the country and the student.

    3 Parents need to be encouraging students to take their studies seriously and in a very disciplined way. In my experience children need to have other activities as a reward like sports, arts etc but video games etc should be monitored very closely and limited.

    Most of the problems with education, economics etc in Bim and globally are essentially due to a lack of discipline ( in terms of behaviour) and thinking.


  27. @Tron
    I would posit that the likes of Maloney,Cow,Kyffin,Bizzy,Bjerkham,Tempro and all those whites so called,have become what they are by a plantation and capitalist system that is dehumanizing and racist,a banking system that is racist,a religious belief that is racist and a conniving ignorant black political class that is dumbisass.Hint,hint,1628 and all that when England stole 166 sq miles of territory and gave a leg up to one Earl of Carlisle and others in return for favours.In the same way this country with an 96% black society,after over 300 years still cannot lay claim to owning the commanding heights of the economy but some poor ass whitey boys can be given political and monetary leg ups to wield influence over the hardworking people who made Barbados what is is by dint of hard work and little luck.If I had my way Cave Shepherd could not bring a dimwit East European and call him an Operations Manager and put him in charge of that Company in this 21st century Barbados.One day Bajans will awaken again as they did in 1937.See what took place of 24 th May 2018?Bajans on the way to taking what is rightfully theirs.If you albinos don’t share the pie so that you own 5% and the blacks 95%,you are in for a rude awakening.


  28. Gabriel,

    I did NOT say that their “abilities” are amongst the virtues I prefer. I just described what they have and the other inhabitants of Barbados lack.

    If the rest of the 95% on this island want to do business like them, they must leave behind the thinking that only a job in the public service is a good job.

  29. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    55? scaling HIGH bars
    Has the student population increased dramatically, or has the bar been lowered?
    Congrats, and my hope they all excel in their chosen fields.


  30. “I would posit that the likes of Maloney,Cow,Kyffin,Bizzy,Bjerkham,Tempro and all those whites so called,have become what they are by a plantation and capitalist system that is dehumanizing and racist,a banking system that is racist,a religious belief that is racist and a conniving ignorant black political class that is dumbisass.”

    That’s exactly how each and everyone of them in the minority business community acquired their stolen land and stolen loot, it was not by being some genius rocket scientist or world class brain surgeon or extremely intelligent business people, it was through bribery, corruption, bullying and exploiting the population, bribing and using a black class of dumb asses in government and vulnerable workers using the slave/racist template, racist laws, slave laws, legislation and practices left on the island by the british and which neither government ever dismantled and destroyed in 52 years, that is how those nobody parasites piggybacked their way to land hoarding through thefts, businesses, taxpayer’s and pensioner’s money and contracts…..then the additional drug and gun trafficking did not hurt either…they have all had decades of freeness, time to cut them off permanently.

    Not one of them could have done it on their own without that head start of a leg up on the majority population, the weakest link being black government ministers who are easily bribed and too dumb to know that they were supposed to destroy the racist institutions and structures….instead of leaving it to be exploited by minority criminals.

    Now they know…so what will this government do to rid the island of these structures and institutions of exploitation so that they can no longer be misused and abused to steal from the majority population.


  31. And according to how the money laundering crimes etc on the island are described by US agencies monitoring small islands, they all know how the arrangements take place, so I dd not only just make this up…it is well known.

    These criminals must be shut down.

  32. Bernard Codrington Avatar
    Bernard Codrington

    @ Northerner at 10 :56 AM

    The high flyers have figured out what the examiners require and are meeting the examiners’ expectations.

    @ Hal at 10:18 AM

    What percentage of the pupils taking the examinations are these 11000 and how do they compare with your PISA yard stick?


  33. the weakest link being black government ministers who are easily bribed and too dumb to know that they were supposed to destroy the racist institutions and structures AND MORE IMPORTANTLY…permanently remove those slave laws that are still in place.


  34. Scholars know they are supposed to shun such stagnant societies that go nowhere, for their own good, until the Mia government does the right thing, no scholar will subject themselves to such a backward, dumbing down of their futures and that of their future offsprings, so if Mia wants to reap the benefits of taxpayers funding education outside for these scholars, she knows what she has to do, remove the barriers and disenfranchisement of these bright young people that were put in place by previous governments for decades and she will not lose taxes to Europe and North America…and the bright minds upon graduating will be able to operate in their own country, contribute to the rebuilding and progress of their own country and will not have to run or remain outside permanently..

    I am actually confident that she knows what must be done.

    I am saying this from a position of knowing a large contingent of scholars who studied in North America years ago and were unable to return because of lack of opportunities, the ones I knew who returned briefly do not work on the island, they can’t, there is nothing there, too much corruption and backward nonsense and very little else.


  35. If you nurture and monitor your children from small, if you understand their strengths and weaknesses, work with them to improve their weaknesses, their genius abilities will rise to the fore..ya can’t bribe ya way to being a genius, it is a gift.

    https://www.facebook.com/ZFirst2Know/videos/1771597936196783/?t=5


  36. Bernard,

    Is that a trick question? Re-read my tread and you will see I have been asking for a breakdown. Only the CXC or the ministry can provide that. Then I will gladly compare it with PISA, which is a public record. I am surprised our media do not press for these figures.


  37. There is a breakdown available..

    “NEARLY 1,500 students who wrote the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) exam in May and June from government and government-assisted secondary schools in TT received no passes.

    This was revealed by Minister of Education Anthony Garcia who, in a brief interview with Newsday yesterday, said he was satisfied with the candidatesโ€™ performance when compared to the past eight years. He said his findings were based on basic details he has received.”

    /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

    “HAMILTON โ€“ Barbadian economist Dr DeLisle Worrell, the immediate past Governor of the Central Bank of Barbados, has joined Bermudaโ€™s Financial Policy Council (FPC).

    Announcing Worrellโ€™s appointment on Monday, Premier and Finance Minister David Burt said: โ€œBermuda is fortunate for the expertise brought to the council by Dr Worrell. His insight will add to the significant knowledge base already present among the distinguished members.โ€

    Worrell joins a seven-member council which was created three years ago to advise on the development of the financial stability framework in Bermuda, and make policy recommendations designed to support the general economic and financial wellbeing of the country.”


  38. And all these store fronts in Swan, Tudor and Broad Streets, most are just fronts for guns, money laundering and drugs and have been from the 80s, the US authorities already had a run at one or two of them as everyone knows, those have no left the island in decades, they have been afraid to leave the island since the 90s…

    .. no scholar will accumulate debt to study at top notch universities in Europe and North America, then return to the island to go work in store fronts for drug dealers, gun runners and money launderers….that is an insult to their intelligence.


  39. Most notably is the store owner who ran from the DEA with a suitcase of US money by the Hilton Hotel..the old Hilton, decades ago…they know who they are…and why they are afraid to travel..lol


  40. An azzold that run away to the mother country and thinks he knows more than any other human being on the island of Barbados wasting space talking about a piece o paper called CXC.George Money headed Barclays in Barbados and the Caribbean.Left school at 16.Peter Holland left school at 15 headed Cable and Wireless Barbados and the Caribbean.So did Branson of Virgin,so did Steve Jobs,so did Bill Gates.Time unemployed black man use his talent and think business.Stop selling yourself short by working for these albinos who benefit from your knowledge but don’t want to pay you for it.This BLP administration seem to be thinking along these lines by giving these folk a leg up.


  41. Black people need to stop working for the gunrunners, money launderers and drug dealers in Barbados, that includes the all-round criminals…I would feel insulted if any relative of mine worked for the likes of Bizzy, Cow, Maloney, et al….I would feel doubly insulted as a scholar to return to the island and have to work for anyone of the present business houses..that is a step down..

    ..Blacks need to open their own business and get their acts together..

    Imagine a store owner in the 90s have a whole lot of Bajans as employees in his little stores yet he is running with a suitcase of US money from the DEA because of some drug deal …a whole load of cocaine…at the Hilton hotel parking lot which went south.

    Then these same criminals want to play uppity and believe they have a right to interfere in black people’s lives and futures…yall better get those skunks out of ya lives, you are the majority population.


  42. WE HAVE A LOT OF TIME SAVERS ON THIS BLOG!

    https://www.brainyquote.com/photos_tr/en/e/ebwhite/109705/ebwhite1.jpg

  43. Juanito Arquero Avatar

    millertheanunnaki poses a semi-interesting question on August 14, 2018 at 7:44 in what many are calling โ€œthe morningโ€.

    Hereโ€™s the question:

    โ€œWhere is the ROI from the billions spent over the years in providing โ€œfree tertiaryโ€ education … ?โ€

    A couple of observations arise. First, how do you calculate an ROI on someone who decides to study history? The probit regressions for Barbados tell you what, exactly, in that respect?

    Second, the notion of โ€œfreeโ€ is slippery. I posit a hypothetical … If all the donors to Barbados, who are mostly poor taxpayers in albino countries, suddenly decided to turn off the tap, for how long (as we approach our sixtieth year of independence) could UWI even hope to survive as a plausible academic institution?

    Just asking.


  44. Maybe they should..let the majority population face reality on their own and be in control of their own destiny and lives……and finally be rid of the parasites.


  45. “A qualification that is useless outside CARICOM.”

    Stupse, UK and US legal training is “useless” in CARICOM too. So what’s your point?


  46. .Gabriel, wrote—-If you albinos donโ€™t share the pie so that you own 5% and the blacks 95%,you are in for a rude awakening.

    Gabby, so exactly what are you proposing?

    Gabby, before encouraging any illicit activity where murder is concerned please comprehend that several Bajans are at most 2 phone calls away from reaching Trump. Remember what happened to Grenada well a few hundred mercs will have Bajans running and pissing blood. U seem very willing to excuse certain other Bajans who U should know are very complicit in any wrong doing against the interests of the majority population.

    I dont condone illegal activity by white people in Bim, there should be equal opportunity and anything that stops that is wrong and should be solved ie banking

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

    MoneyB…that is pure rubbish, first of all you see trump caring about a bunch of small island crooks, he sure as hell will not be reachable, particularly with Omarosa goving him old hell…what does he he cares about a bunch of money launderers, gun and drug traffickers in a black country which he considers a shithole……stop lying..

    Anyway, no one said anything about murder, let them keep what they stole, just cut them off, no more easy access to taxpayer paid ministers, no more easy drug and gun runs, no more stealing from the treadury and pension fund, no more hogging all the taxpayer funded contracts, no more stealing land from old black women..

    … let the majority population get on with the business of rebuilding the country without minority thieves impeding progress.


  48. Moneybrain
    It’s the same message Dipper sent the albinos when he said the best thing that lot can do for Barbados is to get into a barge and when you reach the 12 mile limit, pull the plug and sink with the barge.Its the same mindset that made Dipper say he look forward to the day when not one cane blade will be seen in Barbados,and later to publicly call Reagan a cowboy.Its the same mindset that made Arthur exclaim massa days done.Take your plantation mentality and take a hike,run to Australia and New Zealand like you did prior to 1966.Learn t be like TT Lewis.Stop disrespecting black people.You and Trump can take a hike with wunna brand of morality.Barbados has no future for ethnic superiority of one human over another.So go make your phone call JA.

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