I have previously written an article about the need to have a Federal Government in the Caribbean. CARICOM is but an economic union and was never intended to resolve political and social problems of the region. The reasons to revisit this topic are varied and the single most import that strike home today is that Barbados is experiencing a crisis of gun related crime. In addition to this, there is an unprecedented level of corruption that has been increasing since independence. Despite laws, rules and regulations, there is no body with the authority for oversight and implementation of action against the previous administration in Barbados. The notion that the political class may not have the desire to out each other is also a current reality. The underlying fact is that these island states are too small; everyone knows each other or their family; our court system is in shambles, files go missing, so does evidence and the length of time that it takes to pursue action in some instances signifies that justice being denied.

So where did we go wrong?

It was our failure to implement the WI Federation. It was four long years of struggle from 1958 to 1962 that ended up with the then leaders of the Federation walking away from a project that held the best intentions for the region. That action that led to Eric William’s famous words “one from ten leaves zero,” is currently responsible for 80% of the region’s social and political problems. Short sightedness and the struggle for power way back then set us up for failure. The failure of oversight to halt the actions of corrupt politicians, the failure to address the present crisis with action on gun related crime, the failure to have laws to address unique cases like land disputes, fraud and the recall of politicians.

From around the region there are a few cases that come to mind that makes one wonder if we had a federal government if such outrage would have occurred without punishment or redress. One was the Yugee Farrell case in St Vincent, where a young woman’s quality of life was at the mercy of political action; there is a mortgage crisis in Barbados which no one seems to be addressing; Scotiabank leaving the region, having sold its mortgages to a foreign entity that does not reside in the CARICOM and only the Antiguan Prime Minister Gaston Browne is fighting on his own; treasonous acts by the speaker of the house in Guyana; there is a politician in St Lucia whom the people wanted to recall; the callous acts of corruption of the last Administration in Barbados; businessmen who are mysteriously awarded overpriced contracts and bribery; and the allegation of land fraud which seem to have found a home on the Barbadian landscape. In addition, we have gun related crime in islands that do not manufacture or import guns, yet they are not only available on the street but are daily committing murder.

Despite holding jurisdiction local police forces are simply not equipped to combat these types of crimes. In the USA, while each state has its own government and police force, there is also a federal government for the entire country which has its own policing force known as the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the FBI. The FBI steps in and takes over various types of cases where a local violation fits into a category for which it holds jurisdiction.

This is what is required for CARICOM states, a Federal government with its own police force and a Federal Court system. There would be a local court system and a federal court in each jurisdiction. Recruits from across the region would be utilized effectively by having them serve where they are not domiciled, and persons moved periodically to prevent contamination of the system.

Putting the Task Force on the streets in affected areas in Barbados will not resolve the problem. When they are gone the guns will re appear as they have year after year. Although his presence among the affected is welcomed, the Attorney General’s pictures giving golden handshakes and smiles no longer cuts it. These are just knee-jerk reactions. None of these are a short- term plans. It should have been announced by the Attorney General that he is going after the importers of the guns and the persons who let them bring the guns into the country, with the intent to prosecute them. The source of the problem is not being addressed. One must ask themselves how many times we must come back to this cross road and go away knowing that nothing will change. We are currently using the same old methods to resolve crime and expect to obtain different results.

Putting the Task Force on the streets in affected areas in Barbados will not resolve the problem.  When they are gone the guns will re appear as they have year after year.  Although his presence among the affected is welcomed, the Attorney General’s pictures giving golden handshakes and smiles no longer cuts it.  These are just knee-jerk reactions.  However, finally he has announced that he is going after the importers of the guns and by extension this should include the persons who let them bring the guns into the country.  One must ask themselves how many times we must come back to this cross road and in the pass nothing has been done to effect change. We cannot use the same old methods to resolve crime and expect to obtain different results.

We may have missed that boat fifty-seven years ago but that does not mean that a new attempt of implementing a Federal Government will not work. The region will always be constrained by its size and must work to together to overcome its challenges. Now that we know of the source of the problems and their long-term effects, the challenge is to put in place an effective institution to effect remedy. The challenge will also include the heads of Government of all the islands realizing that there are facing the same old problems but needing new solutions; and not to be focused on insularity. Just as they believe that the islands are one economic union and some utilize the Caribbean Court of Justice as their Appellate Court, they must overcome the fear of becoming a political union.

It is time to move on to a higher level of regional integration with an aim to resolve the political and social problems by creating the institutions that are meant to do this. We cannot go back to 1962 and make the then batch of leaders change their minds of putting four years to waste. We have a current crop of leaders who have new ideas about the development of this region and its people and with new ideas come opportunities.

Herein lies an opportunity. The simple requirement is to have a heavy weight champion for this cause not to resuscitate the old but to create a Federal Government for CARICOM states. A Federal Government that will as part of its mandate, maintain a police force and a court system to investigate and redress a range of violations for which it will have jurisdiction. The only person that comes to mind is our own trail blazer. Despite the fact of a 30 to 0 victory being a great achievement, the icing on the cake would be for our Prime Minister, The Honourable Mia Amor Mottley to not only create and implement a Federal Government of individual States of CARICOM but to also become its first head. It would truly define her legacy, as the vision of ‘Building The Best Barbados Together’ can translate into building the best political union of the CARICOM states together.

222 responses to “A Heather Cole Article – Did We Miss the Boat?”

  1. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    @William Skinner January 22, 2019 8:13 AM “When did Eric Williams say; “ three from ten leaves zero?”

    NEVER.

  2. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    @Hal Austin January 22, 2019 6:10 AM “Plse put meat on the bones and explain in what way has Barbados made great post-independence strides.”

    We have managed to immunize virtually every child, and we have managed to educate virtually every parent into understanding why immunization is important. This month public health nurses–those unheralded female work horses–will go to every nursery school to check the immunization records of every child. Some of us politically minded people may not regard excellent child health as an important achievement, but it is. I speak as a person whose elder sibling had a coffin built when a sick toddler.

    Healthy children is a great achievement.

    But it is mostly women’s work, female mothers, female midwives, female public health nurses, so it is easily disregarded by the testosterone driven. They take it for granted. After all it is “only” women’s work.

  3. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    Amen…


  4. @Simple Simon,

    This has been a regional and global phenomenon. Explain the great strides, ie progress that outstrips the region and globe.


  5. I think there are four Nigerians in the HoC – 50% of them criminals. Do the maths Donna.


  6. Artax

    Don’t quite follow your line of credit reasoning … however, had you read what Hal Austin had said about 45gov concerning his race your ignorance wouldn’t have betrayed you as well … how is asking whether or not 45gov is an Ecky Becky employs an absolute?

  7. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    Ha, Ha….that is all ya will get out of Barbados…ya ae asking for way too much..ya expectations are too high..

    and ya lucky to even get low mortality rates in children and high longevity in adults..


  8. And how many of the white MPs are criminals who have escaped with the proceeds of their crimes? We ALL know how that works.

    You spend almost ALL of your time here spouting this stuff. What do you hope to achieve?

    And you call ME sad?????????

    SMH.


  9. I will follow you everywhere with the facts. You will not further damage the psyche of any weak-minded reader.


  10. I hold no briefs for the white criminals Donna, merely pointing pout the inescapable numerical correlations.


  11. 45gov

    And most West Indians wrongfully believe that all Bajan males are bullas …there is saying among West Indian people here in the US, that when you go to Barbados you better don’t bend down …

  12. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    In 1977 when I first started checking the data Barbados had the third highest rate of cervical deaths in the world. Those dead women were our mothers and grandmothers and aunts and great aunts, our neighbours and the women who went to the pipe, the shop and the shop with us.

    Now Barbados ranks 86 in cervical cancer deaths. Which means that we are doing better than 85 countries.
    https://www.worldlifeexpectancy.com/barbados-cervical-cancer

    In 1977 most Barbadian women did not even understand that they should go for a pap smear every year once they had become sexually active. So our aunts, elder sisters, grandmothers and aunts, died in pain, in silence and in shame. Now virtually every every Bajan woman knows that she can get a pap smear at any doctor, publicly funded polyclinic or at the Cancer Society or Cancer Support services. And women go for their smears. Rich women, poor women, black women, whits women, religious women, unbelieving women. They go, they are tested, and if cancer is found they enter treatment while a cure is still possible. So now women rarely did in their middle years of an easily curable cancer. And we get to enjoy the company and the family services of our mothers, elder sisters, aunts and grandmothers for much longer periods.

    But cervical cancer is mostly a women’s issue female mothers, female aunts, female grandmothers, female wives, female daughters, so it is easily disregarded by the testosterone driven. They take it for granted. After all it is “only” a women’s thing.

    Until that woman is your mother, sister, wife, daughter…


  13. Sir Simple Simon

    Who kept statistics on cervical cancer in 1977?

    Also one of the fundamental causes of cervical cancer is sexual promiscuity at a young age, which attracts diseases such: chlamydia, human papillomavirus which is purported to be one of the main causes of cervical cancer…

  14. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    We need to do the same with prostate cancer. presently Barbados has the third highest rate of prostate cancer deaths in the world, which means that OUR men are where the women were in 1977. We can do better. We must do better. What are the men of this blog going to do to get their fathers, brothers, sons, uncles to present to a polyclinic, the cancer Society, or Cancer support services for a PSA, prostate specific antigen test? and for a digital rectal examination?

    Barbados is a country with 14 veterinarians and 3 urologists. What are YOU going to do to change those numbers? Neither the PSA or digital examination are expensive or painful, but how do we get the men to present?

    In its lack care for its men, Barbados is NOT punching above its weight. In its lack of care for men Barbados is a failed state. It its lack of care for men, 2 men die of prostate cancer EVERY WEEK, for their families it always ends in tears.

    We can do better.

    So we must.

  15. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ David BU

    From political union to racism. How is it that over 30% of these moots end in the race card being played? Do we really intend to move forward ? We have an opportunity to show the world how one can perceive humanity beyond the colour of his epidermis. And too many of us are missing out on it “bigly”

    @ Heather

    If corruption and violence cannot be identified and contained in a small homogenized nation like Barbados , what empirical evidence do you have to believe that a larger West Indian Nation would be more successful?
    How do you read the statistics on crime and corruption that emanate from the larger CARICOM countries?
    Is size a determining factor ? And in what direction does the causal relationship run?


  16. @Lexicon,

    You are a brave man. I was going to make that point, but hesitated.


  17. Sir Simple Simon

    Do believe everything you that the medical community tells you …because these people have a habit of pinning diseases on black people … Nevertheless, you made no mention of ovarian cancer which takes a lot of lives annual as well …

    However, prostate and breast cancer are hormonal cancers which are exacerbated by a high-fat diet … Plus age, race, environment, diet and gender are all the factors which contributes to the onset of cancer …


  18. Ok Hal


  19. Mr. Lexicon

    I’m not at all surprised that you “don’t quite follow my line of credit reasoning,” after all, it’s a known fact that your comprehension skills are questionable.

    But, as usual I’ll concede to you.

  20. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    @Lexicon January 22, 2019 9:41 AM “Who kept statistics on cervical cancer in 1977?”

    The World Health organization.

    The Barbados Ministry of Health.

    Lexicon and Hal may not have been paying attention to cervical cancer statistics in 1977 since it is a women’s issue, but since I had (and still have) six sisters I was.


  21. What an absurdity!

    The United States of America, its Zionist sidekick and their privatized armies like the former Blackwater of Eric Prince, the brother of Education Secretary, Betsy Devos are recruiting Caribbean Islamists – Deash – to comprise their black-flagged global army to fight their proxy wars in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, western China and even Russia.

    Do you think any amount of this Caribbean nation-statehood trite could ever solve that and the increased gun violence which must be a by-product?

    Why should the region, for example, continue to expend resources on immigration structures, all kinds of ‘lists’ which the Americans have instructed them to erect, but the Americans themselves are the ones, by their very actions, who undermine these very systems, which they might even pay for, in the service of a grander geo-political design?

    This notion has failed for 70 years, yet those you seem to have a partisan political reason to either shield MAM or lionize her as some great Caribbean leader are now seeking to raise this dead issue in order to burnish her credentials, deflect from impending failures.

    And why continue with this hold-over from slavery, the maintenance of a petite prison-industrial-complex? Is slavery done or not? Do you know that African peoples, their linguistic traditions knew no such conceptions – jail, prison, incarceration etc?

  22. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ 45 govt at 9:20 AM & 9 :31 AM

    Your statistical inference is wrong. The Nigerians in the British Parliament were not chosen randomly; therefore they cannot represent all the Nigerians living in the UK and much less all Nigerians world wide. This is profiling.
    I know that you should know better since you are alleged to have come from my neck of the woods. We had integrated schools there with excellent teachers. Do not let them down.

  23. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    So what are hal and Lexicon going to do to get Bajan men to deal healthily with their prostates.

    Remember that these men are not strangers.

    They are our sons, brothers, fathers, grandfathers, uncles, schoolmates etc. The men who work in the Barbados media, the men who work at District A police station, as did my beloved brother, and yes he was dead by age 65, and yes from untreated prostate cancer.

    These men are not strangers, they are not numbers. They are the men whom we all love.


  24. “Scotiabank leaving the region, having sold its mortgages to a foreign entity that does not reside in the CARICOM and only the Antiguan Prime Minister Gaston Browne is fighting on his own;”

    So far, the only two CARICOM member states that have expressed concerns about Scotia Bank deciding to sell its operations to the Trinidad-based Republic Financial Holdings Limited (RFHL) are Antigua and Guyana.

    Antigua’s PM Gaston Browne was reported as having said he was “disappointed that the authorities of the Bank of Nova Scotia would decide to sell its operations in Antigua and Barbuda without any form of consultation with the regulators or the Finance Minister whose agreement and authority for such a sale are required by law.”

    Guyana’s Ministry of Finance issued a statement in which it was mentioned Financial Institutions Act (FIA) has clear stipulations regarding ‘acquisition of control’ and requires approval of the Bank of Guyana following the submission of an application and due diligence being conducted. They have also taken note of the statement by RFHL that the agreement is “subject to all regulatory approvals”.

    Has our Central Bank or the Ministry of Finance issued any statements on the pending sale?


  25. Vincent, yes it iS profiling, and why not? It always irritates the hell out of me when I see TSA or other security going out of their way with the PC nonsense to search little old white ladies with blue hair while giving the binbags a pass. Then if you have travelled much through the UK, the security systems are almost exclusively manned by the very people who necessitated them in the first place.
    We are quite mad….or our politicians, do-gooders and lefties are.
    Who has ever been worried about travelling with a bunch of Jews?

  26. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    @Lexicon January 22, 2019 9:58 AM “Do believe everything you that the medical community tells you …because these people have a habit of pinning diseases on black people.”

    So tell me Lexicon what interest “those people” the medical professionals, including my brother’s own beloved daughter, sisters, nephews and first cousins, what interest would they, all black people, all medical professionals have in pinning diseases on their black father, brother, uncle, first cousin?

    We Bajan men have to stop making foolish excuses and deal healthily with our prostates.

    Excuses dun.

    Take healthy action now.

  27. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    Nobody pinned prostate cancer on my beloved brother. I went to the doctor with him. A black doctor. I saw the prostate cancer as big as an orange myself. The prostate is supposed to be the size of an ackee seed, not the size of an orange.

  28. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ 45govt at 10 :38 AM

    Agree that it is unfair for the” little white ladies with blue hair” to be subjected to such treatment. TSA may have been acting with an abundance of caution or alerted by alternative information. I have not witnessed any such treatment. Maybe your experience was an odd occasion .
    On the lighter side, I always assume that those ,selected to man these security points were chosen because they can readily distinguish features like mine more accurately than the indigenous population. LOL!!!


  29. As per usual on BU these articles quickly dissolve into a mismash of accusations, slander, ignorance and general mayhem including the introduction of unrelated topics.

    Sticking with the topic before I meander as for the WI Federation that ship has sailed and in keeping Barrow’s memory alive the “political bandits” ruling the sundry islands will ensure of that, if anyone is interested in searching for the “Flying Dutchman” or should that be “Flying West Indian” Good luck.

    The newly knighted SS introduced the subject of the high rate of prostate cancer in Barbados which given the demographic and the gender populating this blog should be of interest and I would like to pose a few questions:

    What is the follow up to a high PSA result?

    Do patients get a biopsy?

    If a biopsy confirms cancer what is the treatment?

    Is treatment readily available or do I have to get in line at the QEH?

    I have heard that the costs of “private” care surgery etc. is prohibitive is that what is skewing the statistics as persons who can’t afford to pay die while on a waiting list?

    When I hear of urologists in Barbados only one name is mentioned……….

  30. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    @45govt January 22, 2019 8:44 AM “Have you ever heard of anyone getting a letter wanting to transfer millions to them from say, an Icelander??

    So who collapsed Iceland’s economy a few years ago?

    Nigerians?

    No.

  31. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    Pakistanis?

    No.


  32. The Germans.

  33. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    There are no more than 2 or 3 urologists in Barbados, so if ya got a kidney stone that needs shattering, ya better haul ass to Canada, US etc or anywhere but Barbados..

    There is a huge problem with the high rates of prostate cancer suffers on the island, men need to educate themselves more about their prostates and don’t wait until they grow to breadfruit sizes or larger…

  34. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Artax at 10:34 AM

    There is nothing unusual or unexpected about the sale of a mortgage portfolio of an International bank.

    . Pachamama and I have been trying to alert this Blog to the changed International Capitalist System.
    It is the function of Scotia management to reallocate its portfolio of assets in a manner that yields a level of profits that would increase their bonuses and pay a high dividend to their shareholders. There is very little that the Political Directorate and the regulators can do.
    Indeed on closer analysis their response might have been triggered by recent policies and regulations. Their job is to pursue business strategies to achieve their business objectives.

  35. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    @Sargeant January 22, 2019 11:06 AM “What is the follow up to a high PSA result? Do patients get a biopsy?”

    A patient ca only be biopsied with his consent.

    A big part of the difficulty is getting male patients to show up for the procedures, and getting them to accept the treatment.

    How is it that we have gotten women to show up and dropped the rate of cervical cancer so significantly?

    Tell me, as man, what would you advise for your brothers here in Barbados?

  36. Sir Simple Simon, P.C. Avatar
    Sir Simple Simon, P.C.

    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog January 22, 2019 11:20 AM “There are no more than 2 or 3 urologists in Barbados”

    Our young physicians, male and female will only go on t postgraduate training in urology if they are convinced that they will get work.

    My suggestion is that the government find 5 or 10 of our brightest young doctors and pay for their training as urologists, and guarantee them work for at least five years afterwards. And at the same time provide training for the same number of young people but in the area of public health education and communication, that is get the urology training done, and get the public health education/communications trained. I believe that with this strategy the men will catch up with the women.

    We need to do it.

    We can’t afford to wait anymore.

    Men take their dogs to the doctor.

    We have to use any means necessary to get them to take themselves to the doctor.

  37. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    “The Germans.”

    lol..wuhloss, that can get us deeply involved in even another topic.

  38. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    “My suggestion is that the government find 5 or 10 of our brightest young doctors and pay for their training as urologists,”

    a very tall order given the embedded backward mentalities of the leaders…seeing that most of the politicians/ministers etc… if their toe nail hurts them they RUSH off to US, UK or Canada…so it is not as if they care that there are not enough urologists on the island to service the maybe 2,000 males who are actually educated enough to seek medical attention for abnormal sized prostates….


  39. @Vincent

    Some people will always see the world and its problems through a manufactured lense.

    Issues of race and bigotry will always be with us. We have to ensure we do not let wedge issues bring things to a halt.

  40. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    “Putting the Task Force on the streets in affected areas in Barbados will not resolve the problem. When they are gone the guns will re appear as they have year after year. Although his presence among the affected is welcomed, the Attorney General’s pictures giving golden handshakes and smiles no longer cuts it. These are just knee-jerk reactions. However, finally he has announced that he is going after the importers of the guns and by extension this should include the persons who let them bring the guns into the country. One must ask themselves how many times we must come back to this cross road and in the pass nothing has been done to effect change. We cannot use the same old methods to resolve crime and expect to obtain different results.”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    A most profound paragraph of the understanding of the illegal drugs and guns problems facing the Island. Barbados is a mere 2×3 island with a rather incestuous business network snugly in bed with the country’s various law enforcement agencies.

    Just a display PR in the form of a load of excited hot air from the authorities whether from the DLP ancient regime or the current band of red shirt bullshitters aimed mainly at humiliating the residents of those depressed communities where the garbage is piling up to rival Mt. Stinkeroo.

    One only has to recall the case of the imported condemned chicken wings to figure out how things go in Bim.
    What has become of that inquiry other than the main political player can no longer served his constituents chicken wings à la Donville even from an American Sing Sing.

    What has become of those cases where both illegal drugs and guns store in shipping containers and assigned to specific business houses/persons were intercepted at the Port (thanks to the tip off from forces the local agencies dare not ignore) but no further action has been taken against the importers?

    Seems as if poor Charles H had fallen out of favour with the then political kingpins and a sacrificial example had to be made of him to appease the naïve masses while Leroi Greenverbs is free as a crooked bird to fly to Par(r)is.

  41. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    “What has become of that inquiry other than the main political player can no longer served his constituents chicken wings à la Donville even from an American Sing Sing.”

    lol….Miller, June is soon here…tick, tock..

    the present government in all their giddiness have forgotten that both governments have played that nauseating meet and greet game before AND FOR YEARS when attempting to pretend to address the guns and drugs trafficking and importation which is a monster of their own making, don’t know who they are trying to fool….but it is old, worn out and tired…

    they do not have the mental acuity to come up with a new and different smoke screen…..to fool the existing gullible….SO LOOK OUT FOR MORE OF THE SAME.


  42. “There is a huge problem with the high rates of prostate cancer suffers on the island, men need to educate themselves more about their prostates and don’t wait until they grow to breadfruit sizes or larger…”

    An enlarged prostate is not indicative of prostate cancer.
    where is GP when you need him


  43. Miller

    We do not believe that the Barbados Police Force or the local ‘political kingpins’ of the DLP variety have access to the intercepts etc which would have been central in the detection of Charles Herbert, as himself a drug kingpin.

    You may better point causation at the DEA’s office in Barbados and their familiarity to the ways of the NSA and the Pentagon.

    And your political panties are showing as you seem to believe MAM should be eternally protected from this gross error of judgement in relation to stinking Herbert.

    We had warned you and Bushie and David, this blog, about Herbert. But he was your blue-eyed, BLP boy-savior.

    We would not be surprised of there is a DEA investigation of his political associates, including MAM.

  44. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @Sir Simple Simon, P.C. January 22, 2019 11:36 AM
    “My suggestion is that the government find 5 or 10 of our brightest young doctors and pay for their training as urologists, and guarantee them work for at least five years afterwards. And at the same time provide training for the same number of young people but in the area of public health education and communication, that is get the urology training done, and get the public health education/communications trained. I believe that with this strategy the men will catch up with the women.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Since you have the medical panacea for every disease afflicting Bajans why is the rate of NCD’s skyrocketing in an environment where 90 % of the population has ‘benefited’ from a secondary school education and is served by a ratio of doctors to the general population to make places like the UK and USA green with envy?

    If you want to have old people around then you must be prepared to cater and care for them.
    What about making Euthanasia a legal option for those who have become bored of the one-day-after-the-next cycle of boredom and aches and pains?
    Barbados has an aging (graying) population problem on its hands but does not have the resources (like Japan) to deal with it. The country cannot even deal with its garbage and public health problems.

    Maybe this is Mother Nature’s way of culling some of those who have passed their ‘usefulness-to-society date’ in order to take some of the potential pressure off a growingly unemployable self-centered and indifferent but contracting younger population.

  45. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Vincent you noted above that “There is very little that the Political Directorate and the regulators can do” regarding “…Scotia management [reallocating] its portfolio of assets…” …but how can that be accurate if in Antigua there is a stipulation of the banks’ operational charter that there is ” … consultation with the regulators or the Finance Minister whose agreement and authority for such a sale are required by law.”

    And similarly in Guyana the “Mnistry of Finance issued a statement in which it was mentioned Financial Institutions Act (FIA) has clear stipulations regarding ‘acquisition of control’ and requires approval of the Bank of Guyana…”

    Worst case the country regulators could void the sale and at minimum sanction the bank with a fine for contravening the laws.

    Of course both acts may be selfdefeating in some regards but if Scotia is finally pulling up roots then big deal if corns are crushed and relationships cast asunder… PM Browne can void the deal if he perceives he has legal grounds to do so and seek a sale to a more favoured local or regional institution.

    What purposes of regulations and laws if companies can simply bypass as they see fit… the regulators do have enforcement options other than the public posturing expressed in the press statements… whether they really want to use them or why they d’ont want to is the question.

  46. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Pachamama January 22, 2019 12:15 PM

    My political panties are Purple (black); not red nor yellow nor blue.

    We will continue to watch for the fruition of your forebodings and those of the other “Ascended” Master Piece of De Rock.


  47. Simple

    An enlarged prostate is not indicative of prostate cancer … because when some men reach in their 40s the prostate gland starts to enlarge and sometime it would press against the urethra and restrict men flow … but medication such proscar is the used to treat this problem …

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