grenville-phillips
Submitted by Grenville Phillips II,

By now, it should be evident to everyone, that the long-line, long-wait, high-tax method of managing Barbados has not changed.   There is one notable exception.

As a semi-frequent traveller, I would rate my recent GAIA arrival experiences as the best of all countries to which I have ever travelled.  On my most recent flight, I was out of the airport in about 10 minutes after it landed in Barbados.  Every step of the arrival process was pleasant.  Even my departure was pleasantly noteworthy.

The obvious next step is to implement this remarkable efficiency across all aspects of the airport’s operations, and all public services.  Unfortunately, our low self-esteem got the better of us.  We have decided to give this Barbadian model of exceptional efficiency, to a foreign company to manage.

If our airport was a place of gross corruption and political patronage, then please call in a foreign company to save us from these corrupt political agents.  Since they are unlikely to go willingly, a foreign company that they cannot intimidate, should send our political tormentors home.

Instead of planning to privatise that that sort of corruption, we want to privatise the Grantley Adams International Airport.  To allow a foreign company to manage our airport for 30 years is to privatise it.  After each 30-year cycle, we will be forced to keep it privatised, because by then, that is all that our children would know.

We seem to want to prove to the world that we are just too stupid to manage our own airport.  Worse yet, that our children can never be good enough to be trusted to manage their inheritance.

Do we care what message these actions send to the next generation?  Why are we forcing them to embrace the slavery legacy?  This legacy is the idea that regardless of what you may achieve, you can never be good enough if you are a descendent of slaves?

This curse limits our dreams, and perpetuates the myth that prosperity is only for a few.  It also damages our self-esteem.  In 2019, we should be trying to break these stupid curses from over Barbados, not trying our best to perpetuate them.

If a company lacks important skills, then a confident manager will try to employ persons with those skills, regardless of where they are from.  A fearful manager will try to sell the company.  We are effectively selling our airport.

We were able to successfully manage our airport for over 50 years.  We kept improving the customers’ experience until finally, we have demonstrated an international standard of excellence in the arrivals section.  We now have two options.

The mature option is for Barbgaia2adians to manage all aspects of the airport, to the same standard of excellence as the arrivals.  This will facilitate a demand for Barbadian airport managers, to provide quality management services to inefficient airports all over this planet.

The lunatic option is to sell our airport.  Turning over the only airport we have, to a foreign company to manage, is to sell our children’s inheritance.  When we sell their inheritance, they are forever deprived of senior management opportunities, and will receive little in return.

With no opposition in our parliament, the administration will pursue whatever options it wants, because it can.  The government needs to listen to alternate solutions, especially when planning to pursue options that permanently disadvantage our children.

They need to recognise that any curses that were passed down to their generation, do not need to be passed on to our children’s.  After we have achieved excellence in the airport arrivals section, why is privatisation the only option that our parliamentarians are able to see?

As our nation’s elected leaders, they need to confront the slave legacy of low self-esteem, that manifests itself by automatically trying to deprive others.  They need to discourage the practises of pulling down those trying to achieve, and kicking down any ladders to achievement once their donors have climbed.  They need to reject these curses and start leading – for all of our sakes.

Grenville Phillips II is a Chartered Structural Engineer and President of Solutions Barbados.  He can be reached at NextParty246@gmail.com

87 responses to “The Legacy Curse of Slavery”


  1. David

    Guarantee?

    What if they make a lost one year?


  2. We should treat the PPP with GAIA as strategic partnerships then? Trying to justify asking the partner to commit to a ROI. Is there a precedent how PPPs operate in other parts as it pertains to the P&L?

  3. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @bimjim
    “I was told she did read it, but threw it on a table and mumbled “Not impressed”.[quote]
    I have difficulty getting others to read a three sentence e-mail, and you think the PM is reading a 20 page document? A cursory glance, a skimming of the sentences, nothing else apart from delegation…”read this and tell me if there is anything useful in it”.


  4. ROI Oversight Commission ????

    And this suggestion come form from one who, many time here on BU, criticized the formation of new “laws/regulations” because the enforcers do not enforce?

    According to Mariposa “Whaloss muh belly”

    /


  5. “BIMJIM

    How bout posting it on BU?”

    fantastic idea, that way if they use it you will know, after begging Diasporans to help, they then turn around and be rude and disrespectful…make sure they can NEVER…use you ideas..post it and catspraddle them, they cannot use Natalie Critchlow’s ideas either WITHOUT BEING FULLY EXPOSED… they did not think anyone would find out.


  6. It is not inventing the wheel for those who don’t know. As David said quite correctly it’s already done by the FTC for Emmera and if your memory is failing, let me remind you of those things called ” rate hearings” that use to be held for Bartel when they sought a rate increase. Wendell McClean used to hold their feet to the flames there before agreeing to parting with a cent.

    All a ROI commission does is formalize both the FTC and a watchdog for the PPPs under jurisdiction with teeth. If that is too hard to understand I can’t help you any further.


  7. WURA

    I think bimjim submitted his ideas for “her” to use them.

  8. SimpleSimonPresidentForLife Avatar
    SimpleSimonPresidentForLife

    @Northern
    You would be amazed at the number of.people who think that more is better. When I wasn’t a bum and actually worked for a living how many people would send a 40 page document instead. How was I supposed to read 80 or more of those?


  9. Open your eyes to the FRAUD that was perpetrated on Black people in the Caribbean, it’s even worse in Barbados…..you are still falling for it..

    https://youtu.be/2UsgEqEJwKM?t=113


  10. Ya Palace Negros DBLP spent the last 60 years…destroying the African SPIRIT in the Bajan populi, they had to please and appease filthy racists, so the African spiritual connection in the majority Black population had to go…now here they are SUDDENLY running around Africa pretending to have a spiritual connectiion…BUT THEY HAVE NONE.

    African spiritulity does not work like that..


  11. “WURA

    I think bimjim submitted his ideas for “her” to use them”

    I don’t think JimBim meant for her to say the idea was GARBAGE…then she will SNEAK and use it anyway and not give him any credit, it is a pattern with no class scum, palace negros…., that is what they do..


  12. I suggest you first understand what David is saying/asking/trying to get over to you.

    The irony is not in what a ROI commission does

    The irony is that you is the one who consistently criticize the regulators for their lack of enforcement but now you are calling for a new oversight body to be formed just to justify you call for PPP..

    My memory maybe failing but I can remember

    “oh its a waste of time implementing a building code because those incharge of implementing/policing will not do their job of enforcement.”

    The financial regulators in the Clico affair
    T&P enforcement(lack of) with the squatters
    Police, judges and who ever else with the PSVs
    Even the same FTC with the BWA

    Yet the all of a sudden you can now come up with some regulators that worked /will just to justify you idea of PPP?

    Here is more irony from you!

    Where is the money going to come from to pay the ROI commission ? The public purse that you are such a protector of?

    Now you would rather pull on the public purse to pay the commission (who will probably be well off/rich people) and to enrich local rich people or , most likely, overseas rich people than to subsidize the bus fares to help the poor.


  13. I going try one final time and explain how it would work.

    If the TB was to be in a PPP and the fare remained at $3 as is because the FTC set it there, but the taxpayer could save the $5 million dollars monthly in subsidy that Sinkler confirmed is needed, pray tell me what the downside would be?

    You clearly are trying to discuss something you either don’t understand or refuse to accept. As for the money to pay such an entity you seem to also forget we paying one already and it’s called the FTC.

    So carry on arguing with yourself or stop and think on it. Either way all at you.


  14. You can pretend you don not understand what I am saying to you.

    I was not discussing how it will or will not work. I was talking about you conveniently switching your criticism of enforcement bodies in Barbados to now giving support to ROI commission so suit fancy.

    keep dodging


  15. Ok, since you want to continue IF

    What IF this new transport PPP is required to adequate service the non profitable long haul and hilly routes (AS THEY ARE REFUSING TO DO NOW)?
    What IF they buses in theses areas break down at a similar rate to that of the current TB that is now servicing these areas?
    What IF/when gas prices goes up?
    What IF they make a lost at the $3 fare?

    What then will happen?
    Abandon the none profitable routes?
    Abandon the hilly routes to save wear and tear?
    Police, students and pensioners will have to pay?


  16. Sinkler said $5 mil a month was needed
    Since he gone excess workers that were being paid were sent home, bus fare was raised and more buses were put on the roads I am sure we are not still subsidizing at that 5Mil rate.


  17. In july the government borrow just over 26M from republic bank to cover overdraft from NHC, QEH AND TB
    You want to tell me that TB still leaking sinckler $5M a month?

    I am the one with bad memory and clearly don’t know what I am talking about !

    WHALOSS MARIPOSA BELLY


  18. Senate okays overdraft payoff

    Article by
    David Hinkson
    Published on
    September 5, 2019
    The Senate today approved a $26.3 million loan to repay the overdrafts of three state-owned enterprises.

    As she introduced the bill, Acting Leader of Government Business in the Senate Senator Kay McConney said the loan from Republic Bank is to cover the overdrafts incurred by the Barbados Transport Board ($10 million), the National Housing Corporation ($10 million) and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital ($6.3 million).


  19. Elite Pan-Africanism

    ALL AH WE IS ONE

    THE PAN-AFRICAN COMMISSION OF BARBADOS is no more. This occurred with no announcement in the news and it generated no national discussion, in a context of a Government which prides itself on “taking the people into its confidence”.

    Given these realities, and given the heavy overdose of PR personnel that characterises the central ethos of the administration, it can only be surmised that any silences surrounding the dissolving of the Pan-African Commission, must have been deliberately orchestrated.

    With the disappearance of the Pan-African Commission, the necessary question which arises is what has taken its place? The answer goes to the heart of understanding the nature of governance in mature post-colonial Barbados in the context of economic crisis and the need to contain

    TENNYSON

    JOSEPH

    the political and economic aspirations of the black majority population.

    A central part of this process involves the role of the black political elite, through the political party, hijacking the movements of the people and channelling them into “safe” directions.

    The grass roots, peopleto- people linkages intended in the original Pan-African Commission, have been replaced by a more centralised prime-ministerled state-to-state “contacts with Africa”.

    Recent examples of this have been seen in the official visits to Barbados by the Presidents of Kenya and Ghana and in the reciprocal visit to Ghana by the Prime Minister of Barbados, one of the highlights of which included the reburial of the remains of a Barbadian enslaved person in Ghana.

    While this elite-led link with Africa represents

    an important step in advancing Pan-African interests, it carries the potential danger of alienating the common folk.

    The manner in which the claimed “reburial” of the remains of a Barbadian enslaved person was handled from the Barbados end provides a case-inpoint for demonstrating everything that is wrong with elite Pan-Africanism.

    It was expected that an event as solemn and as significant as the return of the remains of an enslaved Caribbean person to the ancestral homeland would have been treated as an important national event around which the whole nation would have been mobilised.

    The religious and political community, students, historians, Pan-Africanists, Rastafari, all, should have been at the Newton burial ground to witness the unearthing, and to “send off” the remains with the pomp and spiritual and political gravitas befitting the occasion.

    Instead, Barbadians were informed of the “re-burial” via a WhatsApp, perhaps the brainchild of the PR advisors. It was reduced to an important non-event – the deliberate consequence of elite Pan-Africanism.

    Just like “cannabis legalisation”, the aim is to take the grass roots soul out of Pan-Africanism, while maintaining official links that can advance the economic interests of the old business elites, who today seem to be the beneficiaries of the longstanding political projects of the black poor.

    This summarises the state-of-play of the black struggle today, and also simultaneously, signals its next steps.

    Tennyson Joseph is a political scientist at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, specialising in regional affairs. Email tjoe2008@live.com.


  20. Barbados ignores any law that observes the human rights of Black people and must be consistently EXPOSED FOR THOSE CRIMES…and got the damn cheek to believe that people are DUMB Enuff to allow them to get away with that evil in the 21st century..

    http://www.afrikanheritage.com/barbados-ignores-international-declaration-on-the-rights-of-indigenous-culture-and-people/?fbclid=IwAR3Gr3wd_FzVNIBPaQ0cp0rK5t1jwLt4zMKcRV3_FeXh4CK4RLp2EhDud_g


  21. And they believe all of that is ok, they believe people will just sit back and rock back like their useless yardfowls and allow this to take place without exposing it….i would not go anywhere near Africa with that gang of crrooks because the intent is very clear, would not want my name called in any association with any of them for WHEN it all goes COCKUP…

    …..i can find Africa on my own thanks very much…hope they all get fed to crocodiles.

    “Just like “cannabis legalisation”, the aim is to take the grass roots soul out of Pan-Africanism, while maintaining official links that can advance the economic interests of the old business elites, who today seem to be the beneficiaries of the longstanding political projects of the black poor.

    This summarises the state-of-play of the black struggle today, and also simultaneously, signals its next steps.”


  22. @ WURA-WAR-on-U,

    Give credit where credit is due. By opening up the Africa front. Mia has a safe haven to run to should the natives revolt.

    With regard to those corrupt members of the DLP and the BLP they too are probably plotting an exit strategy should the social situation deteriorate in Barbados and will probably be visiting Kenya or Ghana soon.

    You may have noticed that Caribbean politicians – both present and past – are been monitored. Their frequent visits to Europe or North America have stopped abruptly.


  23. TLSN…yep…ya can just feel the heat, Africa is huge so the house negros who never wanted to identify with the Continent and considered themselves…ANYTHING BUT BLACK BEFORE…will now have to reconsider and run home to Mama Africa…ain’t life sweet…lol..

    ya gotta remember that they ALL HAVE OFFSHORE ACCOUNTS..been boasiting for years about their millioinaire status…but the people and island are broke the country’s infrastruture is an ugly sight, they cannot hide the fact that both the treasury and pension funds were raided by them and their racist minority tiefing friends…so yeah…they are all well worth monitoring…they have all ROBBED GENERATIONS OF JUST BORN AND NOT BORN YET…they RAPED the island these skunks….and left the people to suffer..

    the regular crook/lawyers cannot stay out of Cayman Islands these days, where many many OFFSHORE ACCOUNTS are parked…


  24. We done know how the wannbes in Barbados love to copycat …every dirty thing their masters do they copy too…it would be nice to know if they somehow elevated themselves to this level….although me thinks they would be seen as the village trash and don’t be invited to participate in these types of exclusive crimes..

    https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/9709564/jeffrey-epstein-british-contacts-mick-jagger-tony-blair?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=sharebarweb&fbclid=IwAR3kbZhbHIMCTB4DHEP_gH7dAWehADY3OdBaX-TR2Ij1joLv4uooqEAlcKg


  25. @ William

    I have been reprimanded for comparing the 2018 Mottley government to the 1961 Barrow government, but the comparison needs to be explored.
    Both represent black elitism (I have not yet read Hilbourne Watson’s political biography of Barrow, but I understand it is very good), the 1961 government represented the so-called Young Turks, while the Mottley government represented one of entitlement (the changes to the constitution to accommodate friends) and both set out to speak FOR ordinary people, and not TO them. It is the politics of lawyerism.
    Barrow’s 1961 ambitions were limited in that Barbados was still a colony at that point; Mottley, on the other hand, believes she has a plan but it is not one to discuss with the people. We just would not understand.
    Look at the undemocratic policies introduced by this Mottley government, including CBC under the direct control of an unelected senator without any public discussion not even by the media workers’ union/trade association.
    You have an opposition DLP that is so silent it is deafening (@William’s duopoly); why can’t it hold the government to account? As has been pointed out, the undermining of the Pan African Commission does not come as a surprise. I will like to see a proper analysis of the commission, including the long periods of in-fighting with some of its leading personalities.
    Was Commissiong’s appointment as our man at CARICOM anything to do with these changes, along with Hyatt? We must be told. We also need to explore why the development plan comes under the BTMI as the lead agency, and not the relevant ministry and fully discussed in parliament? Again, another undemocratic move.
    We urgently need a serious debate and not just rum shop nonsense.


  26. @ Hal

    The current PM is a product of the political class. She like all the others, has been influenced by the Barrow style of leadership. It’s an obvious conclusion. What goes in comes out. Like I said recently it’s the same political DNA.


  27. That article by Tennyson Joseph more eloquently lays out what I said about not being invited to the unearthing and what that means.

    Worth reading. Worth thinking about.


  28. Black people will never see peace until white supremacy is defeated/ destroyed all over the world. The racist pig Emmanuel Macron (French president) sponsoring terrorism in Africa to gain access to mineral. The French recently gave Booko Haram( terrorist group) drones & new military hardware to destabilise & create terror & chaos in Nigeria.

    https://youtu.be/d2FkjOExFNg


  29. France sponsoring terrorism.
    https://youtu.be/d2FkjOExFNg


  30. https://youtu.be/0_iHf1sVYEU.

    @akenatenI

    Did research, agree with you100%. No peace for melanated people until the white supremacist who rule France Britain , Washington fall.These crackers create wars to gain access /control of key mineral resources.

    Boko Haram: Stop Sponsoring Terrorism in Africa, Protesters Tell Macron
    By METROWATCH -December 11, 2019

    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism (MAST) has cautioned France President, Emmanuel Macron, to stop sponsoring terrorism in Nigeria and other African nations.
    The Pan-African group made their voices heard on Wednesday at the end of a one-day walk to the French embassy in Abuja, Nigeria’s federal capital city.
    The visibly frustrated Africans, numbering in their hundreds demanded that the French authorities must end ties with Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists which it has routinely armed.
    Addressing the media in front of the French consulate, convener, Princess Ajibola said the mission was to get Macron’s attention that Nigeria is a sovereign nation and any attempt to compromise its territorial integrity would be resisted.
    According to madam Ajibola, the group has overwhelming evidence to back its claim that the European nation is indeed behind the recent upsurge in terrorism in the country.
    The group reckoned the French action is born out of greed – hinged on economic benefits owing to the avalanche of economic resources in the North-East, particularly the Lake Chad Basin region.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism, therefore, warned the French authorities to desist from further mischief which has undermined the remarkable gains of the Nigerian Army.
    The group also called the attention of the United Nations to the crime against humanity being perpetrated by Macron.
    Read full address below:
    Ladies and Gentlemen,
    This is a protest for the rescue of the soul of our dear country Nigeria from the forces of evil that have attempted to cause disharmony and disintegration by covertly sponsoring the activities of terrorists in Nigeria.
    We embarked on this protest march to send a powerful message to the French authorities that Nigerians are indeed aware of its nefarious activities with regards to the ongoing war against terrorism in North-East Nigeria.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism as a civil society organization decided to take our protest to the French Embassy in Abuja, so the message could be relayed to the French Authorities wherever they are that Nigeria is indeed a sovereign country and as such any form or attempt to compromise our territorial integrity would be resisted wholeheartedly.
    Since 2015 when the present administration assumed leadership of this country, there has been tremendous progress recorded in the fight against the Boko Haram terrorist group. So much so that Nigerian troops captured their operational headquarters (Camp Zero) in Sambisa forest to the glory of God.
    It didn’t stop there; the Nigerian troops also recaptured the over 16 local government areas in North-East Nigeria that were once under the control of Boko Haram terrorists. By and large, the Boko Haram group was decimated and fled in their droves to the fringes of the Lake Chad Basin region, from where they launch an attack on soft target communities within that vicinity.
    We are aware that some vested interest was not happy with the gains made by Nigeria in the fight against terrorism. As such, they began providing logistic support under humanitarian cover to the Boko Haram fighters.
    They also assumed the role of the mouthpiece of the Boko Haram terrorist group. They used their state medium to promote their nefarious activities and to give them the needed psychological boost.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism wishes to state in unequivocal terms that France is indeed responsible for the resurgence of Boko Haram attacks in Nigeria in recent times because there is overwhelming evidence that it has been selling arms and ammunitions to the Boko Haram terrorist group. These arms come into the country through the francophone countries.
    We also wish to send this message to the President of France, Emmanuel Macron, that what France is doing under his watch is indeed a crime against humanity. As such, it must, as a matter of urgency, desist from spreading terrorism in Nigeria and the African countries.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism sees the actions of France as an assault on our sovereignty as a country. This is indeed despicable and must be condemned by all and sundry.
    We are also aware that the actions of France are hinged on economic benefits given the avalanche of economic resources in North-East Nigeria, particularly the Lake Chad Basin region.
    This is indeed an attempt at recolonization, which by all standards is puerile and won’t stand the test of time because Nigerians would resist every move with passion.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism is by this protest asking the French authorities to desist from their evil ways or face the full wrath of Nigerians who are ever ready to protect the sovereignty of the country.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism is also by this protest informing the relevant authorities in Nigeria to act in the best interest of Nigeria as it would indeed be a slap on our faces should we allow France to carry on with its destabilization plot on Nigeria.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism is also calling on the United Nations to investigate the role of France in the spread of terrorism in Nigeria and Africa.
    France must also stop the sale of Arms and Ammunition to the Boko Haram terrorist group in the interest of peace and tranquility. This is on the heels that the bulk of the French NGOs operating in North-East Nigeria are carrying out espionage activities and passing the same to the leadership of the Boko Haram terrorist group on the instruction of French authorities.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism is indeed saying enough is enough, and France must stop the distasteful support it has been extending to the Boko Haram terrorist group in Nigeria, which is aimed at making Nigeria erupt in flames.
    The Movement Against Slavery and Terrorism wishes to inform the President of France, Emmanuel Macron, that the world is indeed watching closely and should the French authorities not halt the spread of terrorism in Nigeria, the day of reckoning is indeed near.


  31. IS FRANCE STILL EXPLOITING AFRICA?
    Auteur: Giorgio Spagnol
    Date de publication: 10/2/2019

    A diplomatic row between Italy and France over migration to Europe started when Italy’s Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio accused France of impoverishing African countries by maintaining: “If today we still have people leaving Africa, it is due to several European countries, first of all France, that didn’t finish colonizing Africa”.

    Di Maio said France was manipulating the economies of 14 African countries that use the CFA franc, a currency underwritten by the French Treasury and pegged to the Euro. He then added: “If France didn’t have its African colonies, because that’s what they should be called, it would be the 15th largest world economy. Instead it’s among the first, exactly because of what it is doing in Africa.”

    There will be no peace in the world ( from Bridgetown to Lagos ) until beast( having seven heads and ten horns, and upon his horns ten crowns, and upon his heads the name of blasphemy )is destroyed.

    THE BEAST( White Supremacy) must be destroyed .


  32. @Greenville Philip.
    Is your party ready / willing to confront the beast ?


  33. Many Africans do maintain that the French have been at the frontline in the enslavement, colonisation and raping of their continent by stealing their gold, diamonds and other natural resources.

    They also maintain that France colonial tax is bleeding Africa and feeding France.

    White Supremacy must be destroyed, this is the only solution for peace for melanated people across the globe ( from Capetown to Bridgetown).


  34. When does the legacy of slavery end? Is 180 years long enough?

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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