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verla_depeiza
Verla De Peiza, Leader of the DLP

 

@David,what rot are you talking? the DLP will be out of govt for at least 10 years. do we really think any person from the last bunch will be around politically at that time? your admonishment is a nonsense under those circumstances. Barrow and others were rejected too. politics is a strange game and the rejected can become the chosen in a wink of an eye politically

The comment quoted was posted by Greene in response to criticism of Verla De Peiza’s leadership of the Democratic Labour Party (DLP). It reveals the electorate’s biggest problem.

There has been a lot of chatter about the decision by former prime minister Freundel Stuart to speak after two years of silence. One of the characteristics of Stuart’s tenure was his unwillingness – some suggest reluctance – to engage the public on the many issues of the day. This detachment from an electorate he was elected to serve permeated his team. The ethos which shrouded his tenure provoked his reference to a sleeping giant who others should be fearful about awakening.

This blogmaster has no intention to be prolix on this matter, the BU family has sliced and diced Stuart matters to bits over the years. Those who prefer to drag a political carcass across the trail to stink up dispassionate analysis, it will not work.

For some time progressive BU pundits have opined that the Bajan electorate has ceded its civic responsibility to the political class.  Key tenets upon which our so called democracy is built require a strident advocacy by the PEOPLE to act as a whip to the political class. What we have is a situation – referred to as the duopoly –  where the Opposition party pays its penance for two terms and is re-elected as the de facto government in waiting.  Some of us have exposed the fault line in our governance system, however, the majority of people have become intoxicated by the games politicians play and do not know B from bull’s foot as it relates to civic engagement.

The last two prime ministers Freundel Stuart and Owen Arthur represent about 25 years in office between them. Is it too much for the electorate to expect them to add value to the governance landscape – post prime ministership – with the objective of making our democratic systems better? For this reason elders in ancient societies have been allocated pride of place and  were pivotal transferring knowledge to mould societies for the better. Instead what we have had is Arthur demonstrating a level of bitterness not worthy of mention AND one Stuart outburst labelled by political pundits as froth over substance.

Some of us have had enough!

it is in this context the blogmaster states categorically there is no merit to Stuart given airtime under the banner of the DLP, if it wants to be taken seriously as being in the vanguard of change. Stuart is free to mirror De Lisle Worrell by posting his thoughts on a website or vblogging on YouTube. The political class has no problem disrespecting the electorate by demonstrating arrogance in office, breaking promises (manifestos), however, the electorate – according to some – must extend all courtesies to Stuart by being receptive to his mouthings on his descension from Mount Olympus. This blogmaster says no!

Two years on it is evident no credible third party movement has emerged. Although disappointing, it is a reflection of the scant regard quality citizens hold for aspiring to be members of the political class. We are what we eat, our governments are composed of poorakey members.

A reinvigorated and reborn DLP is important to a well functioning governance setup in Barbados. One does not have to be blessed with the acuity of the best political pundit to know Verla De Peiza lacks the gravitas in personality to lead the emergence of the DLP.  To have allowed Denis Lowe, Ronald Jones, Adreil Brathwaite et al to hijack her agenda- if there is one -is the biggest indication she does not have control of the party.

Three more years to go Verla, or less!


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212 responses to “Two Poorakey FORMER Prime Ministers”


  1. @ Blog master:

    Blessed Easter to you and the BU household.

    Government should always be a sacred trust. Thanks for a feisty, powerful and provocative piece, going beyond Tompie’s empty rhetoric about “good governance”. Truth to power in what some bloggers already describe as a “failed state”, or “a failed society” and what may ultimately be just another pretentious, hopeless corruptocracy. Straight ahead!


  2. @ David BU

    I know I gine anger the defense attorney and remarks dropper, but seriously, this Jackie Stewart obsession and copy and pasting shyte from Facebook just because somebody says it is corruption and posting the same RH, over and over and over and over again, has become VERY BORING and it KILLING OFF the blog.

    You got to scroll pass too much RH shtye posts to read something worthwhile.

    Lord have mercy David BU, you definitely got to do something bout this, man.


  3. @ David BU

    I don’t know bout you, but UH KHAN TEK IT NUH MORE.


  4. @Dee Word

    Sorry, you are not making sense with this one.

  5. Piece the Legend Avatar

    @ Mr Hal Austin

    Hal

    Your comment

    “…Kow-towing to the tourism ay master will end in tears.

    Genuflection to white people is not the answer to a lack of ideas and policies….”

    is going to go missing in action in this blog

    That the BTMI IS GENUFLECTING is evident.

    In cou tries THAT ARE NOT BANANA REPUBLICS you will see the Department of State or the Department of Justice, Scotland Yard or the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions speaking to these criminal matters.

    Barbados DOES NOT have a Commissioner of Police nor an Attorney General so that function must be effected by the most inappropriate agency because clowns are in the drivers seat!

    Mugabe has NO CONFIDENCE in her Commissioner nor her AG Teets Marshall so that job that is best done by others, falls to the BTMI

    That in turn will be outsourced to one of Stuart Lane or Minister Kerrie Simmonds friends in Canada rather, that will be outsourced to competent Canadian Public Relations who will be wired money for these services

    MUCH LIKE PORNVILLE WIRE MONEY TO HESELF!


  6. and now Miss Bradshaw the Min of Education is floating the idea of Middle Schools In Bim? where do we get these people?

    Middle Schools is a failure in small jurisdictions like Bim. i was reading in piece about the govt in either Bahamas or Bermuda reverting to primary and secondary schools after it experimented with middle schools for 20 years and failed. Miss Bradshaw should read up or ask some teachers about it. i am sure some of them are bajans.

    this flirtation tells me that she is not settled on where she wants to go with this school reform idea and should analyse the real problems and not solved for issues that are not there.


  7. We have to prepare the children better at primary. Too many transfer to secondary with gaps.


  8. Wait until i find the link that says CORRUPTION IS TREASON…just in time for the sell out negros who brought back hanging, am sure they would look just as good swinging from a rope, them and their repulsive limited intellect yardfowls…

    but wait…first may very well come the warrants…and indictments…and convictions….a la Donville..

    yardfowls will then have to go and LOOK FOR REAL WORK….if they are not indicted too

    suck it up..more to come..


  9. lol….that is the short memory and shorter attention span at play.

    that is the part that cannot be whitewashed or explained away or hidden or pretend forgotten…….Donville the poster boy for Barbados’ CORRUPTION…


  10. Hal…the poster boy for paying slavemasters for 40 years for enslaving your own ancestors, you have been on here for more than 8 years, what have you achieved…i will tell you NOTHING…all ya did was get exposed for the fraud ya are..


  11. ” During 2018, Grantley Adams International Airport (GAIA) welcomed 681,197 visitor arrivals, 17,686 more than 2017.

    The island’s cruise tourism was significantly impacted by redeployments following the 2017 hurricane season, officials said, since Puerto Rico – the primary homeport for U.S.-based sailings to the southern Caribbean – was severely affected.

    Through new homeporting business, however, Barbados was still able to see 826,267 cruise arrivals for both transit and homeporting visitors combined, the BTMI said.”

    US$2.9 billion
    Tourism in Barbados
    In addition, the WTTC has forecasted that Barbados’ tourism sector will contribute 44.1% or US$2.9 billion to GDP and provide 76,000 jobs by 2018

    A TOURIST GETTING SHOT can have a negative impact on the economy.


  12. @ Greene

    When I say that decisionmakers in Barbados are grossly incompetent and we play musical chairs with mediocrity, I am often accused of criticising the island of my birth. For that I offer no apology.
    It is normal when introducing new policies for policymakers to look around the world at comparable countries to see what policies they have (for example pensions) before designing their own.
    Earlier you mentioned the UK. In Britain, over the last sixty years, we have had two major policy reports on school age education. The first, the Crowther Report (1959) and ten years ago, the Nuffield Report (Pring Report). I suggest the minister and her boss, a former education minister, should both read those reports before making a hasty decision that will take a generation to reverse.


  13. Has the Minister of Education elucidated on what the new policy will be? If you or Greene have it please share.


  14. Level the ” playing field ” . Improve the standards at all secondary schools before abandoning the 11 Plus or experimenting with “middle schools”.

    Santia should talk to Billie about the 1981 Zoning proposal.

  15. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    I hope that this is not another episode of experimentation with the Education System. I hope that serious and rigorous analyses will be done before these secret, backdoor, birdbrained schemes are put in place. Has anybody outlined what the problems are with the current system? Do we all agree that these are problems? What role is Education to play in the development of the Bajan Society? Will it make Barbados Globalization ready?


  16. Tourism dependency will cause that…now they are back to UK dependency, low wages, abuse and racism practiced against their people….they are trying hard to develop medical marijuana dependency where the people have no say and will not benefit…yes, that is all the CORRUPT of parliament are good for…GOOD FOR NOTHING ..only as it relates to their own people.

    now that a white tourist has been shot and paralyzed watch the little sell out negros run around like their heads have been chopped off….now is the time for ALL THEIR NAMES to be called in the drugs and gunrunning that they all know about.


  17. @David,

    i am not aware that she has produced a green paper on the issue of education reform.

    it seems to me that she is just talking, flying by the seat of her pants so to speak. there must be consultation with all parties; schools, teachers, parents and employers.

    this talk about middle schools is a nonsense and tell me she knoweth not what is she is doing. oh..for the want of a viable opposition


  18. @Greene

    Correct, nothing concrete has been made public. She promised to do so. The concern is the aggressive timeline she spoke to. If the blogmaster were to guess the change will not happen next year. The schools as at today are clueless to the proposed changes.

  19. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Greene
    Let not your heart be troubled. Just observe how this unfurls. There is a pattern.

  20. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Ahhh @MrBlogmastet you are more than capable of picking sense from my remarks.

    You suggested that there cannot be sustained development in our education policies until the pervasive political interference and bias with appointing loyalists rather than pragmatic subject matter experts is ended. That’s a summary of your position, not so!

    I simply countered by saying that will never change, or put another way: it’s a standard (par for course) of almost every political administration. Thus, those who are leaders in the process have to strive to achieve best results despite that political bias.

    Not saying whether it’s easy or ideal; simply stating the truism of life…. seen in all areas and all political admins.

    @Vincent, not to be cynical but it seems that Barbados has been undergoing “episode[s] of experimentation with the Education System” for many years now.

    As a layman it seems we have been lurching from point to pillar to post. The level of “research trained” experts (Master n PhDs) is good enough so the matter of studying other systems is as obvious as obvious can be. There is also the fact of direct experience as many Bajans have worked in other jurisdictions in education and later returned… And of course ‘comprehensive’ education reform analysis has been examined since Sandiford and his BCC implementation (using THAT as the historical place marker for this debate).

    In sum, the folks KNOW how they SHOULD go about implementing ANY new overhaul.

    So just as a layman looking on it is either “experimentation” or that new demands have forced a change when… 1) we strategized (or Sandi n team did) to have ONE expansive 6th form along with the four already in place and now 25 years later we revert to expanding to several 6th form svhools;

    …2) we – or was that Billie n team- strategized that full coed was the way to go and now educators are repeatedly lambasted about that impact on the male psych and a need to revert to single sex school.

    …3) we (Mia n team) strategized that kids with behavioural, developmental and other learning challenges would be best suited in a school with teachers fully trained to handle their psychological and educational issues and nurture them to better learning thus Alma Parris was opened. Bruggadung a new Min of Ed considered the ENTIRE program unnecessary and shut it down. Bruggadung, kids with reading disabilities, learning deficiencies and worst back in 1D or 1Q in ‘regular’ class.

    Isn’t that experimentation bro! Now we talking bout middle school…another bit of (personal) experimentation just for its sake.

    So let’s be clear: of course “serious and rigorous analyses [are] done before these secret, backdoor, birdbrained schemes are put in place” but it just means there are well researched schemes to satisfy the egos of BIRDBRAINED schemers!

    And when you ask What role is Education to play in the development of the Bajan Society?” the cynic in me answers boldly: the same role it always played; to eff up and eff down around and around developing lots of lettered prima Dons or Donnas so that they can then continue to eff up the society to their egos contentment!

    I gone.


  21. Is BU an open market for ideas, or a platform for BLP propaganda? The BLP seems to have a direct line to its editorialising.


  22. @Hants February 26, 2020 9:24 AM
    “Level the “playing field ” . Improve the standards at all secondary schools before abandoning the 11 Plus or experimenting with “middle schools”.
    Santia should talk to Billie about the 1981 Zoning proposal”.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Oh what a great day that would be when the ‘immigrant’ children of Bridgetown can enter the gates on Crumpton Street and those living in Walker’s Valley can walk across to St. George Secondary which can be renamed after the same Dame and Queen’s College after a similar dame called Ronald(a) Jones.

    Now which iconoclastic event will take place first?

    The abolition of the Bajan 11 plus or the ‘British’ Monarchy?


  23. Shut these wannabe slavemasters DOWN….your corrupt governments continue to give them all your tax dollars and pension money…they give these parasites all your contracts so they can collect bribes….while you are paid low salaries and they do not care.

    YOU HAVE MADE ME PROUD…STAND UP FOR YOUR RIGHTS…

    this is the result of years and years of telling Black Bajans that they have a right to STAND UP FOR THEIR RIGHTS…

    https://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/244070/deadlocked

    “Strike action sweeping through Barbados’ biggest construction company could affect critical projects as both workers and management refused to back down yesterday.

    As a result of the tense two-day stand-off between C.O. Williams Construction and more than 200 of its workers over wages, the matter has now gone over to the Labour Office.

    The company is involved in several Government projects, including the in progress demolition of the former National Insurance Building in Bridgetown to make way for Golden Square Freedom Park; construction at Sam Lord’s Castle in St Philip and crucial roadworks, the latest being in Collymore Rock, St Michael.

    The workers said they had not received an increase in eight years and Barbados Workers’ Union general secretary, Senator Toni Moore, said they thought the matter would have been closer to a settlement at this point. (WB/AC)”


  24. @ Mr Vincent Codrington

    You see you?

    You is a next fellow we going ban!

    For 2 occasions in 30 days you mek another serious statement that is profoundly critical of the Mugabe regime

    Particularly you have asked Santia Bradshaw the current Minister of Education these four questions

    “…1. Has anybody outlined what the problems are with the current system?

    2.Do we all agree that these are problems?

    3.What role is Education to play in the development of the Bajan Society?

    4.Will it make Barbados Globalization ready?…”

    I only got one thing tell you Mr Codrington

    That is 2 heavy hitting questions in 30 days.

    The rule is 3 instances where you show up the government of Barbados or its agents to be AND YOU WILL BE BANNED

    Piece say so! Heheheheh


  25. this would be an ideal time for Verla to come out and state the DLP’s position on education reform and what it hopes to do in this regard when it forms the govt.

    the DLP is wasting a good chance to get into the hearts and minds of bajans who dont agree with and are wary of Govt’s floundering on this vital issue.

    opportunities like this dont come too often.

    what is also missing is any real opposition from Atherley or any of his surrogates. Piece, what gives?


  26. @Greene

    Does Verla have the powerbase and gravitas in personality to be so bold to take on a wedge issue like education?

    #askingforafriend


  27. @Greene

    What is a wedge issue? For some time now I have been saying that Barbadian English is different to English English. We accept this with American English, International English, Jamaican English, etc, but when it comes to Barbadian English it becomes controversial.
    You will be familiar with the UK/London English, and the official recognition of what is now called MLE(Multicultural London English), or more familiarly black London English. This differs from Cockney, Estuary English or South London English. Same with Bajan.
    Now we are talking about education, it is a good time to talk about functional literacy.


  28. @David,

    the type of education reform that Bradshaw has bruited about can hardly be described as a wedge issue. it is too fundamental a change to be so described. the reforms go to the v core of the education system.

    surely the DLP, and Artherley’s party must have their own views on something so fundamental to the functioning of Bim

    @Hal,

    they say English is a living language. lol


  29. @ Mr Greene

    Reverend Atherley seems not to have received any instructions from his boss.

    The one in Llaro Court.

    De ole man muchly disturbed by this total blackout

    Has he been ill recently?

    There in none in the 3rd party constellation like he and Caswell!

    1.He goes to St. Michael North East to fight Mugabe Mottley

    2.He endorses Senator Caswell Franklyn as the Leader of the PDP

    3.They Run on the thrust of implementing THE POWER OF RECALL

    4.They change the term from 5 years to 4 years

    Dem 4 tings alone is balls busters for Mugabe Mottley

    What you think?

    I starting to miss Ironsides though!

    I like I should not have expose Ironsides for who he was!


  30. @ Piece the Legend

    I’m a bit curious.

    Could you please explain how would Atherley endorsing Senator Caswell Franklyn as the Leader of the PDP, assist that political party chances of winning the next general elections?


  31. @Greene

    A wedge issue in the context used is questioning Verlas tenuous positioning as leader to lead discussion on education as you have suggested. The country is split on this matter which often is stoked by emotional argument. Verla has more pressing matters like replacing the rotten windows and doors at HQ in George Street.


  32. Piece,

    you must have a philosophy from which you are going based your ideas for running a govt if you are in opposition and even though i think there is no difference between the D and Bs’ political philosophy, we are yet to know Atherley’s and or his party’s

    Caswell as the leader of the PDP or whatever it is called would be an interesting choice but does he have the gravitas, to use the word of the day, to take on MAM?

    3 years would be better. then you wont need the power of recall

    who is going to St Michael North East? Caswell or Atherley? it doesnt really make a difference. Mottley has that bought out; lock , stock and barrel

    some observations- PDP is a poor name for a political party. you need something catchy like People Progressive Party. Barbados Progressive Party.

    you need a dynamic leader with a stated philosophical mooring as to how he/she sees issues etc. for example a progressive party could say that they will digitise Bim and give people the power to contact and interact with the party and leadership via the internet and offer ideas.

    as it stands now, the PDP whatever that stands for, appears to be BLP lite


  33. @Greene

    Expand your comment to include all the third parties have sputtered to deliver. With a headless DLP meandering door like Mia has the right away to do as she bloody well pleases. Who do we blame, Mia or we the people.


  34. @David February 26, 2020 12:12 PM “Does Verla have the powerbase and gravitas in personality to be so bold to take on a wedge issue like education? ”

    If Verla does not have the power base are there not several DLP former Ministers of Education who can weight in/who can lend a hand in formulating the DLP policy on education?

    After all if the people of Barbados should vote in a DLP government in 2023 surely the DLP should know what they have in mind?

    I mean Ronald Jones was Minister of Education for 10 years was he not? He is still a member of the DLP, not so?

    Surely if a persn has been Minister of Education for more than 10 years, and in addition has decades of experience as a teacher, teacher’s union rep, and a master’s degree or higher in education, surely that person must know a thing or two about education?


  35. And Sandi is still alive is he not? The boys of BU always calling old fellas relatively young. Sandi is relatively young isn’t he?

    I mean John Compton was a relatively young 81 when the the people of St. Lucia made him Prime Minister.


  36. @Simple Simon

    What advamgowould it be for Verla to turn to Jones ?

    #breathe


  37. A Barbados-born senior professor in education who recently retired from Yale. Can’t we get him to carry out a report on our educational system, or do we prefer to play it bye ear? I know a London-based, Jamaican man, married to a Barbadian woman with a home in Barbados, who would love to take a look at our educational system. All it will take is a telephone call.
    Whatever happened to the two-yearly Diaspora conferences?

  38. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    Hal Austin

    Why? Who knows what we want more than we?


  39. @ Tron February 25, 2020 3:14 PM

    “and the soil is not suitable for large-scale agriculture.”

    I am curious: How did you arrive at the above statement? Barbados grew a lot of sugar cane for a long time. The Israelis cultivate the Negev desert ( an area that is prone to saline soils when irrigation water is applied by a process called capillary action). There is a lot of technical ways to circumvent any imagined problems. The main problem facing Barbados is the idea that it is tourism or nothing.


  40. @ robert lucas February 26, 2020 6:28 PM

    The productive capacity of the large flat lands in Greater Guyana and Suriname is much higher than in Barbados. Fly along the Essequibo River and you will see the difference. Our agricultural products cannot compete with South America, USA or Europe in terms of price. Far too expensive with the same quality. The best thing is to supply ourselves with food from the other CARICOM territories, as long as we don’t have to pay in USD.

    Nevertheless, you are right on one point: we have to make sure that the local rum is made from local sugar cane. Otherwise our rum will become a total joke.

    I also agree with your criticism of tourism. But we should bear in mind that no solution is in sight. Economic diversification is extremely difficult for a small island off international trade routes. In any case, new hotels are no solution to our fundamental problem of lack of economic profitability. The existing hotels are already operating at insufficient capacity.

    We have only one hope, and that is that some of the new wealth of the Guyanese will spill over to us.


  41. @ Tron February 26, 2020 6:55 PM

    Tron, the devil’s advocate, which other currency would Bajans pay for the imported food? In Mickey mouse Grantleys?

    Doesn’t Israel produce almost 70% or more of its food requirements instead of depending on some of its more agriculturally-fertile neighbours for its food security?

    The best thing, according to your reasoning, is for Barbados to become an ‘independent’ colony of British Guiana.

    Wouldn’t it be a crossover case of black Bajans jumping from the English white man’s plantation into the Hindu hotel and Muslim retail shop?

    In whose hands do you think the COW estate- after he ‘soon’ kicks the bucket- would end up as the asphalted plantation for Bajan black workers?

  42. Piece the Legend Avatar

    @ Artaxerxes the Superlative Archiver
    @ Mr. Greene

    De ole man apologizes for this truncated version of the Strategy.

    The general public sentiment is that the Reverend Joseph Atherley IS A JUDAS!

    Whether that be the truth or a lie de ole man suggests this as a campaign strategy for the PDP (a name I have some difficulty with because…)

    1.I believe that the campaign that will be wages against Joseph Atherley WILL BE OF SUCH VICIOUSNESS that he will NOT be re-elected.

    This is his last term

    2.That compulsory demitance of political office being imminent suggest that his enforced departure BE USED AS A POLITICAL RALLYING CALL.

    Have you gents ever read “How Horatius Kept the Bridge?”

    It is a poem by Lord Macaulay dat de chilrun used to recite AND DE OLE MAN TEIF!

    “…Then out spake brave Horatius,
    The Captain of the Gate:
    ‘To every man upon this earth
    Death cometh soon or late.
    And how can man die better
    Than facing fearful odds,
    For the ashes of his fathers,
    And the temples of his Gods…”

    “And ho can man die better than facing fearful odds…”

    Joeseph Atherley WILL FALL IN THE NEXT GENERAL ELECTION as it is foretold by de ole man

    BUT

    and here is the brilliance of de ole man (dat does get dem vex when dey read dat heheheheh) HE SHOULD NOT FALL IN VAIN!

    So what he is to do is announce on National Radio THAT HE WILL CONTEST AGAINST THE MUGABE SEAT in St Michael North East.

    Because he believes that IT IS THE RIGHT THING TO DO!

    This is immediate currency for his party in the eyes of Bajans.

    3.Furthermore, in addition to his doing the right thing, GIVEN THAT HE WILL LOSE HIS SEAT, he will not be leader of the Opposition!

    And it would behove him to promote the democratic endorsement of senator Caswell Franklyn AS THE FUTURE LOO!

    now that you understand the backstory there are a few details dat de ole man will share with you that will allay your fears about the Duopoly and the statement about philosophy.

    The electorate is tired of the musical chairs between the former robbers and the 30 to 0 state of government in Barbados

    THEY WILL NOT go back to the vomit that is the DLP but, given all Mugabe Mottley machinations dem WILL NOT VOTE FOR THE BLP.

    In fact, de ole man predict a similar swing of conscience that will see Mugabe lose 10 seats by “osmotic fear”.

    Note the use of that spontaneously generated term and how it will be adopted globally now de ole man spoke it.

    The other 8 seats that the PDP will win WILL BE WON THROUGH ATTRITION heheheh.

    The CORONAVIRUS or February Disaster as foretold by *** will sweep over the country’s economic projections and lay waste to Mugabe’s plans.

    And this will bried disaffection among the other 8 seats

    I cyan tell you all dat strategy heah but…

    Now you Mr. Green talk bout 3 years and ting but I recognise that you cant be serious about that suggestion because no government can effect serious change in 3 years so you only put that in as a joke.

    With regard to the issue of Philosophy de ole man suggests the, AS WITH THE BLP & DLP, that is what you write down pun you manifesto.

    However, for de PDP to win IT HAS TO PRODUCE DELIVERABLES while it is in this political wilderness.

    “…’Hew down the bridge, Sir Consul,
    With all the speed ye may;
    I, with two more to help me,
    Will hold the foe in play.

    In yon strait path a thousand
    May well be stopped by three.
    Now who will stand on either hand,
    And keep the bridge with me!’ ”

    Which of you gents will keep this “bridge” with me?

    Heheheheh

  43. Piece the Legend Avatar

    Your assistance please with an item here

  44. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Vincent, the principal or only merit to @Austin’s post is that of necessity we must look at other systems in order to learn from their errors and benefit from their successes and thus having an outside expert (whether expat or not)ticks that box well.

    The fact is however that any such analysis will not be a one man or women show and ideally it would be a team (of three or so) that would lead such a review…thus again of necessity a local (locals) would be part of that team.

    That is straightforward first steps for any serious and proper strategy for a national education plan and everybody and their sister with an iota of management experience knows that…so Austin’s list of names is really irrelevant as who actually would constitute a review team can be sourced from many, many well qualified and experienced practioners…in and out of Bim!

    And re this ‘middle school’ thing… the concept has a basis in practicality but whether we need it would have to examined carefully. As a first former who got my head slapped in that ritual every September at my standpipe I would definitely have adored a middle school then 🤣…because no one would have been that much older or bigger than I was and thus definjtely would not be inclined to get a return punch … but when the slapper is big and tall bravado is overcome by that sense of pain!

    That bullying can be a big deal, but that apart not sure of any other grave reasoning why we (in Bim as opposed to US schools particularly) need to separate 11 year olds from 4th and 5th formers. (Middle school covers our 1st, 2nd and 3rd formers, if I understand the process clearly).

  45. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ dpD

    So far having reviewed the evolution of our Education System ,my opinion is that we have kept pace with the changes and developments in most developed countries. We have little to be concerned about. Of course from time to time we have to tweak and revamp. My understanding is that this is done on a continuing basis. I, therefore, have no fears. I know from experience that when changes are not implemented they are unworkable. A little costly but could be catastrophic if enforced. I hope that approach continues.


  46. @Tron February 26, 2020 6:55 PM “We have only one hope, and that is that some of the new wealth of the Guyanese will spill over to us.”

    So we should fold our hands sit on them and hope that some of our neighbor’s food will spill into our mouths?


  47. @ Miller February 26, 2020 8:13 PM
    @ Silly Woman February 26, 2020 9:02 PM

    As for the currency for food: we could exchange our Barbados dollars for food from Guyana and Suriname and the South Americans could spend these dollars when they come to their island holidays. That works, at least in theory.

    But not even in theory will the expansion of agriculture in Barbados work. We simply do not have any workers who want to work in the sun all day long in the fields. Even here on BU they call ANY form of physical labour slavery. Or can you imagine a farmer who forces his workers into the fields with a gun? Not even the devil’s advocate could do that, honestly. Farming is a dead end. Barbadians are no Israelis, they’re no determined Prussians of Arabia.

    Our chances are all in Great Guyana, the new El Dorado. We don’t have to submit to Muslims or Hindus, there are supposed to be black Guyanese who are good at business. They need lots of guest workers to build roads, sweep the streets, feed their dogs and suchlike. I guess that at least 50,000 Barbadians could find their fortune as guest workers there. This would also solve the problem of overpopulation. There are simply far too many people living on the island.

    And what are the Barbadian workers doing at COW´s plantation? That’s right, they strike, they moan, they howl and demand a pay rise instead of moving their as*** to Greater Guyana. I predict that in 10 years at the latest, the Guyanese will take over the whole Williams conglomerate. Williams is simply no longer competitive with Barbadian workers.


  48. @Tron February 26, 2020 9:30 PM “We simply do not have any workers who want to work in the sun all day long in the fields.”

    I was surprised when you said earlier that the problem was the land, because i know that typically you blame all of the world’s problems on the Bajan worker. Why the quick about turn?

    @Tron February 26, 2020 9:30 PM “Farming is a dead end”

    Amazing that farming is a dead end, but eating food 3 or 4 or more times a day is not a dead end.

    Sigh!


  49. Another Kolij man gone.


  50. @ Mr Green
    @ Artaxerxes

    I have been posting a response to your earlier questions

    About 4 times but it’s being blocked on purpose because it’s an anti Mugabe Mottley strategy so………

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