grenville-phillips
Submitted by Grenville Phillips II,

Well, I have finally gotten the message – the threats are now too personal to ignore. To balance the safety of my family, and my duty to Barbados, these will be my final recommendations on COVID-19. They are to cover Stages 2 and 3.

The accusations are, of course, baseless. Asking basic questions is not breaking rank. Questioning is normal when the four steps to develop national plans are not followed.

Step 1 is to develop a draft plan. Step 2 is to present that plan for rigorous public scrutiny (since the public are stakeholders). Step 3 is to analyse the feedback and finalise the plan. Step 4 is to implement the plan.

Both administrations typically only do Steps 1 and 4. There is rarely critical review. This results in either stubbornly staying with a failing plan, or making band-aids under pressure to a weak plan.

The media should be asking pertinent questions, but they seem to have gotten the message a long time ago. They make press conferences as meaningless as a soap-opera. How about asking some of these questions.

The Government claimed that they will be spend $30M to build quarantine sites and respond to this virus. How is the Government procuring the $30M in goods and services?

No-bid contracts normally cost the public two to five times what the contract is actually worth. Is the Government using the same corrupting no-bid contracts for contractors, consultants and supplies? What qualifications are needed to share in the $30M to be disbursed?

The Government promised to appoint a contractor general to put an end to these corrupting no-bid contracts. How is that progressing? Why not start prequalifying Barbadian business right now, instead of automatically disqualifying most of them with the sorry excuse of urgency?

The hurricane season is approaching. We should not be constructing sub-standard buildings in Barbados, especially after turning the six-storey NIS building into rubble. So, to what category of hurricane are the buildings being built? Also, to what magnitude of earthquake? How durable are they?

I dare our established media to ask just one of these questions. Once they realise that the sky has not fallen, perhaps they will be less terrified – and ask another.

RECOMMENDATIONS

In preparation for Stage 2, we should assume that at least one person in our household will get the virus, and plan accordingly.

1. Supplement Diet

If I got the virus, then I would strengthen my body so that it can fight for me – as it has always successfully done. I would add to my daily diet: 1,000 mg of Vitamin C, at least one table-spoon of Blackstrap molasses, and at least five table-spoons of Apple Cider Vinegar.

You can purchase one gallon of blackstrap molasses from the sugar bond area of the port for $2, but carry a clean wide-mouth container. You only need a quarter of that, so distribute the remainder to others.

2. Sunshine

Ultra-violet sunlight is an effective disinfectant. Therefore, everyday, I would open every window curtain and let the sun shine in. I would also open the windows (with insect screens) to ventilate the house. Therefore, maintain some insect mesh and duct tape to keep out flies and mosquitoes.

If I got the virus, I would spend my days near a window where I can get natural light, and breathe clean air.

3. Flush Closed Toilets

COVID-19 RNA has been confirmed in blood and stool samples of some infected persons. Droplets from the toilet have been found on bathroom ceilings after flushing. Therefore, droplets can reach the bathroom’s sink (and any exposed toothbrushes) and towel rack. I would insist that everyone in my household close the lid when flushing the toilet.

Many infected persons have had diarrhea. You are likely to go through toilet paper more rapidly in that condition. Therefore, I would try to maintain 12 rolls of toilet paper for each member of my household.

4. Disinfect Shoes

Not everyone will stop their habitual spitting. The COVID-19 can exist for hours in the air and days on surfaces. You may step on someone’s spit, especially after it rains. Therefore, spray disinfectant on the bottom of your shoes before entering your house, and on your car mats when you get home.

5. Clean Pet Trays

If you feed pets outside, then clean their trays. Uneaten food attracts birds. Birds can step in the same spit and bring the virus to you, so do not attract them.

6. Invest in Yourself

If you are quarantined, then do not squander this opportunity. Take maximum advantage of our double taxation agreements with various countries, especially the US, and grow your Internet based business.

Between managing your business and your household, learn something new. There are many free on-line courses that Universities offer. Take one that can improve your productivity and increase your earnings, then take another.

Please do not waste this time with only entertainment (watching movies and reading fiction). Instead, recharge.

Accept that you may likely get infected, and perhaps more than once. Therefore, maintain your household supplies, and use this opportunity to cultivate a closer relationship with your Creator.

Parting Comments

I have been asked how I know so much. I have worked in disaster areas over the past 2 decades, where the economy came to a halt. In those situations, there is normally no economic activity, nothing to purchase, and no reliable government services.

I have had over 12 deployments to Haiti, when cholera had infected about 800,000 people and killed about 10,000. One member of my team actually had cholera while I was there.

I am also doing doctoral research, and the doctoral research community is rich in cutting edge knowledge. I critically review others’ research and they critically review mine. Why? Because we want to do research that will benefit humanity. Critical review is the most effective method of achieving that aim.

446 responses to “Recharge – COVID-19 @Stage 2 and 3”


  1. AG general states that stage3 would not be an option if Barbados reaches 25 or more infected people with the virus
    The possibility that Barbados has reached more is a reality
    Given that govt let its ports remained open for a long period of time and many workers across the length and breath of barbados would have mingled with people carrying the virus
    If truth be told it would be better to start a stage 3 earlier as a preventive measure against further contamination amongst the people
    The more people mingled amongst each other the faster the spread of contamination
    All have heard the many stories of barbadians unexpectedly interacting with victims who are carries
    This govt without question has help to encouraged the spread of the virus to the island using disguise theme and leaving its borders open at the most crucial times when the virus was in full flight
    Superficial themes like Any port for a storm in times of crisis gives little hope to those caught in the epicentre of the crisis and having to face and live with the realities
    It is about time govt does the right thing for its people and save them from a deadly virus called Corona


  2. @ Hal March 24, 2020 3:37 AM

    Well what can I say apart from the fact that all people deep down are racist. What I would say is that your are consistent where Boris and Trump are concerned


  3. @ Hal March 24, 2020 3:37 AM

    It was announced on the 6.30 am V.O.B news that Barbados is in the process of getting doctors and nurses from Cuba. Dr. J Walcott made the announcement.

    As GP has said there are really rogues in the local medical fraternity.


  4. Why is the Barbados media in unearthing stories that demand transparency
    The story of the stranded 35 Trinis made way across social media
    One would have expected that local media in times of crisis would dig deep keeping govt toes under the banner of transparency


  5. @ Robert
    Consistency is very important. When the facts change, I may change my argument. But principles are forever.
    On the other matter, does this now mean that Cuban medical qualifications are accepted in Barbados? Does this mean when we want to train our young doctors and nurses we can now send them to Cuba? Does this mean the government should apologise to those young people who got Cuban qualifications but were not allowed to practice in Barbados? Does this mean that people like Mickey Waldron have been wrong all along? Does it mean all those newspapers and websites that have sucked up to them should go away and hold their heads in shame?


  6. As usual you are flogging a dead issue. Guess you have not read todays press yet.The reason was stated by the AG.


  7. Read the story the AG presented
    Maybe a little to late
    The PM mission was to.make a gamble with the lives of barbados
    Still it doesn’t seem as if the govt gets the gravity and dangers of the disease
    His comments give comfort of saying
    Too little to late
    As for flogging a dead horse
    The horse has already bolted
    The only thing remains to be seen are how many more people would be infected and how many will be quarantined


  8. @David

    Who decides that this issue is a “dead issue”? A Gov’t with any spine would have returned the 35 to London and let the British Gov’t deal with the Trinidad Gov’t about the welfare of its citizens but what we have here is a timid Atty Gen. mouthing platitudes about humanitarian grounds Since you accept the word of the Atty. Gen as gospel, what happens to those individuals if T & T borders are still closed at the end of their quarantine?

    This s no small issue every Gov’t in the world accepts the return of its citizens under the current conditions but the T & T Gov’t flouts International law and Barbados is a willing accomplice maybe that will buy it a fishing agreement.

  9. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    “ Countries such as South Korea that test thousands of people per day have slowed the outbreak. Other nations must adopt Seoul’s model before it’s too late.”
    https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/23/coronavirus-pandemic-south-korea-italy-mass-testing-covid19-will-keep-spreading/


  10. SARG

    Trini borders only closed for 14 days.

    if it was you mom or dad would you want them go back to England?


  11. @ Sargeant

    Thank you. Do you notice the bogus legal shield that Bajans lawyers always hide behind. When challenge they then become aggressive. But Barbados is nots the only country in the world with a common law process.
    There are two basic legal arguments: how the law is, which is one for advocates and case law; and how the law ought to be, which is one for legal theorists. We often understand one, while remaining totally ignorant of the other.


  12. @Sargeant

    It was a judgement call and the blogmaster agrees with it. These are human beings. Our Caricom brothers and sisters. We are capable of making decisions based on our measure.


  13. No govt cannot break constitutional laws that give citizens their rights of entry to their homeland
    What Mia has done has enable the Trinidadian govt to do as it dam pleases as to thumb its nose at the Constitution
    A strong leader would have pushed against such actions by the Trinidadian govt with the authority given to them through the Constitution in a fight for the peoples right
    Mia has cower in fear that a fight for the people Constitutional rights might bring division between the govt of Barbados and Trinidad govt with cost towards barbados
    Hence Mia decision to disregard the Constitution and take an easy way out
    A way that sets the wrong precedent


  14. peterlawrencethompson
    March 24, 2020 8:57 AM

    “ Countries such as South Korea that test thousands of people per day have slowed the outbreak. Other nations must adopt Seoul’s model before it’s too late.”
    https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/23/coronavirus-pandemic-south-korea-italy-mass-testing-covid19-will-keep-spreading/

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

    What is stopping the spread of the virus on the continent of Africa and when will scientists fears be realised?

    https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/03/ticking-time-bomb-scientists-worry-about-coronavirus-spread-africa


  15. So far science has attributed it to luck.

    It doesn’t seem to have a clue!!


  16. @John2

    If it was my parents I would hope that the country of which they are citizens would take them on their return. The US and Canada just decided to close their borders to any non- essential travel but citizens of their respective countries are still allowed to return home if they are in either country post border closing.

    BTW Peru closed its borders to all incoming and outgoing traffic but it has reached agreement with the Canadian Gov’t to extract its citizens who were visiting and caught by the unexpected ban. It’s what responsible countries do, they don’t abandon their citizens when they are in difficulty.

  17. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @PLT, a simplistic analysis of this pandemic suggests 2 basic methodologies :

    A.Test widely as in S. Korea and then quarantine anyone with a positive result for 14 days… then retest randomly/selectively after that incubation period or

    B.If testing is compromised for whatever reason (not enough supplies) then boldly restrict ALL other than necessary services personnel to 14 day quarantine…. and again selectively retest afterwards.

    Either or both establishes the seriousness of the leadership and grapples forthrightly with the issue…. Barbados has done NEITHER or anything else seemingly focused on arresting the problem. What are we doing!

    @David, agree with you. I am critical of Mottley’s overall strategy but on this TnT issue it seems a no brainer to me: help the TnT brethren and ‘perform’ as a statesman in the time of ‘insane’ actions by the TnT govt.

    The fact however is that this is NOT performance art… one act of commonsense in an otherwise reckless series of acts is not acceptable.

    And again I repeat: the TnT seniors themselves were a bit ‘reckless’ when they decided to proceed with their holiday…but they should NEVER have been denied reentry to their own country… they are NOT returning biohazard terrorists as the Defense Minister apparently conjectured!


  18. @ Quaker John

    What is the ratio of smokers to non-smokers in Africa? Maybe they are drinking Bajan rum.


  19. Is Trinidad part of the CCJ?

    If yes, then under what legal grounds would Barbados have for turning away CARICOM nationals?


  20. Sarge

    I think we all agree that trini should accept them

    my question was meant to be
    if they were your parents, would you want Barbados to ship tham back to England and let the two governments deal with it?


  21. No one can fault govt on humanatarian grounds for allowing the 35 people
    The Fault lies in enabling The govt of Trinidad in turning their backs on their elderly citizens
    The Fault also lie in this govt abandonment of the Constitution which would have directed govt to a fair and justifiable path (to take )in favour of the elderly couples
    What i observed is a weak kneed govt giving into the pressure of Trinidad
    A pressure which might come with economic consequences if Barbados dare opened its mouth
    These “Humanitarian” Gestures in my mind are bracketed with gran expectations in the mind of govt .


  22. @John2

    wouldnt TT face the same question?


  23. DPD

    Not sure about the time lines but didn’t the trinis start the travel before any cases of the virus was detected in trini and long before the travel ban was put in place? The band was probably put in place when they were on the cruise ship. these are not the only ones that started a vacation/trip during this time.


  24. Greene

    I am not sure if trini is part of CCJ but if I was one of or related to any of the 35 I would sue the TT government for every cent I could get. and campaign against the government when ever the next elections come around.

  25. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @de pedantic DribblerMarch 24, 2020 9:42 AM

    The flaw in your argument is that to “… boldly restrict ALL other than necessary services personnel to 14 day quarantine…” is guaranteed to be compromised. Who decides who is necessary services? How do you know those personnel are not infected? who operates the transportation system to get these necessary personnel to and from work? etc…

  26. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    We NEED mass testing.

  27. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    A national shutdown is not a substitute for mass testing. Of course a national shutdown will make the rollout of mass testing more efficient because you can then test the essential personnel first,


  28. @Peter Mottley heard the Czar stated yesterday that 100 000 kits were ordered and should be delivered in a few weeks?


  29. The trini 35 left on feb 25th

    Trini first case entered on march 7th and was announced around march 12ish.

    border closed was announced on march 16th – at which time the 35 would have been somewhere between south Africa and dubai trying to return from their interrupted cruise.


  30. @John
    Covid-19 appears to progress to the serious stage much easier in older people (70+)
    The median age of many African nations is well below that of the developed nations.

    Also, African nations’ role is globalisation is primarily for unskilled labour (e.g mining). There is not as much back and forth travel between Africa and Asia as there is with Europe. With not many Africans traveling to Asia for business the probability of importing the virus is reduced.

    I still expect the numbers to pickup, but at a slower pace

  31. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @ac
    bullshit. Do we deem Greece, Jordan , Bangladesh and all those other places with large refugee camps, as ‘enabling’ Syria, Sudan, Myanmar etc? Are the governments of the former giving into the latter.
    It is a humanitarian move PERIOD
    One might ‘think’ it would upset the GoT&T as they are being ‘shown up’ rather than buying favour.
    Then again you know this.

  32. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @John2…

    A.re Not sure about the time lines but didn’t the trinis start the travel before any cases of the virus was detected in trini and long before the travel ban was put in place? The band was probably put in place when they were on the cruise ship. these are not the only ones that started a vacation/trip during this time.

    NO. And NO. This is news report with which I have based my remarks….until it’s disproven I will call the seniors “reckless” and the govt “insane to deny entry to its own citizens”!

    ++++ THIRTY- FIVE elderly nationals of Trinidad and Tobago will land in Barbados from London on Monday afternoon […] They left for a tour on February 25 and landed in Dubai and were supposed to return on March 27. But National Security Minister Stuart Young announced on Saturday that all TT borders will be closed from midnight Sunday (March 22) and no planes will be allowed to land as part of the fight against the Covid-19 threat.

    Their local travel agent said when they arrived in Dubai, they spent three nights there and then started a cruise to South Africa. Due to the Covid-19 outbreak, they were only allowed to stop off in three ports including Oman on March 5. Then for the next 17 days they were on the ship and docked in Cape Town on Friday and were allowed to disembark on Sunday (March 22)…. The travel agent is asking for permission from the National Security Minister Stuart Young to have the 35 be allowed to land at Piarco International Airport.

    But when contacted, Young said TT borders will be closed as part of the fight against the Covid-19 threat.

    He said, “Our borders are closed from midnight tonight (Sunday). The reason for this is to stop the importation and spread of Covid-19 in Trinidad and Tobago. “It is a fact that the most risky places for the contamination and spread of Covid-19 have been international airports, cruises and resorts as advised by the medical experts… “We had warned that travel should be limited to essential and emergency travel only. Unfortunately, we have to close our borders to stop the possible spread of the virus.”++++

    Harsh and unbending… leading to my remark about biohazard terrorists. But RECKLESS by the seniors. They left their lovely country and were then cooped up on a cruise ship because of WHAT… COVID19…

    The Defense/National Security minister was suitably PISSED that intelligent, thinking seniors could be so ‘callous’…yah think!

    If my father had made THAT decision he and I would have come to high words I’m sure. I would have said Dad you CANT go, let’s try to get back as much of the deposit as possible…but going is madness, because by THAT date in February things were already quite, QUITEproblematic !

    Enuff said. It was a stupid act and Min Young COMPOUNDED it by being draconian!

    B.Sue your country against a NATIONAL SECURITY edict… good luck with dat!

    I gone.


  33. @Peter
    We need three types of testing. Healthcare workers, aggressive contact tracing testing and random testing of the those who display symptoms.
    With regards to random testing, I think an initial random sample of 500 should be enough to extrapolate and make predictions for the population. An epidemiologist would be able to tell us what the statistically relevant threshold percentage is to require expanded testing


  34. Where is the judgement call when Mia had sufficient time to stand up against the evil power of the TRinidadian govt
    Isnt as if the govt of barbados got over night details on the plight of the people
    The article clearly details timeline

  35. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @PLT, well there you go 😁… you disabused my argument and then nicely codified it for me with….“… Of course a national shutdown will make the rollout of mass testing more efficient because you can then test the essential personnel first”

    I used the broader term of “necessary services” when for BETTER specificity I should have said “essential personnel”…so let me be even more specific and say first responders, police, fire, health workers as being essential…. then we have limited public transport facilities or taxi services to allow those folks to get to work.

    Nothing rocket science here…SOPs for ANY MAJOR crisis PROJECT PLAN!

    Bottom line we do need to FLATTEN the curve and do it promptly… whichever way is most effective!


  36. @ Hal March 24, 2020 7:27 AM

    I took another stroll through town ( I should say further into ,since I live in town) to observe the happenings. I encountered another of my former students. He was waiting in a line to enter a Credit Union. Told him he ought to know better that ,he should observe the space distance. He wanted to know if I was foolish or what? That somebody would get in front of him. What could I say to that ?Proceeded into town proper and a sight met my eyes that I could hardly believe. The lines waiting to go into supermarkets waere something else. there was hardly any space between individuals in the lines. I thought that by now things would have gotten back to normal, but it doesn’t look that way, One carrier would create havoc in those lines. Government will have take drastic action

  37. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    And collectively the world has had many years to stand up to the evil that is the Syrian government. YEARS. Sometimes it is better to aid the PEOPLE affected, than to play hard ball politics.
    It really questions your daily written concern about PEOPLE? People are first, unless you can support a political angle which suits your bias.


  38. DPD

    Many people were on leisure trips ant the time the 35 departed to start their cruise. There were no problems in Trinidad or no indication that the ports would be closed (and to citizens) at the time of departure.

    RECKLESS – maybe from the point of view of contracting the virus – mayyybe but that’s not really the point.

    If they had left after there was an announcement that there was going to be a shutdown or if the had gotten as far as England and they were notified that there was going to be a shutdown at that time and they still continued instead of turning back, then they would have less empathy from me.

    But shoots man, the shutdown was announced when they were already more than 2 weeks into their trip. they we not in Barbados where there could just hop on a plane and be back home the next day

    again many other people from other had the same experience as these 35 that you called reckless – I call them unfortunate


  39. Best time to visit Korea.

    https://www.selectiveasia.com/south-korea-holidays/weather

    Spring is early this year.

    https://www.selectiveasia.com/south-korea-holidays/weather

    Possible explanation.

    Maybe it is all about temperature!!


  40. DPD

    Where is the threat to national security from these 35?

    Trini don’t have the resourses to test / quarantine/ isolate / treat these 35?

    National security issue is bare BS


  41. Redguard
    March 24, 2020 10:23 AM

    @John
    Covid-19 appears to progress to the serious stage much easier in older people (70+)
    The median age of many African nations is well below that of the developed nations.
    Also, African nations’ role is globalisation is primarily for unskilled labour (e.g mining). There is not as much back and forth travel between Africa and Asia as there is with Europe. With not many Africans traveling to Asia for business the probability of importing the virus is reduced.
    I still expect the numbers to pickup, but at a slower pace

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

    Could be temperature too!!!

    Look at Italy, it is the north that has been hardest hit.


  42. Interesting map

    https://www.thelocal.it/20200309/map-which-parts-of-italy-are-affected-by-coronavirus-outbreak

    If it is temperature we would expect to see it abate in the worst affected areas, like it has in China.


  43. … and if it is temperature, we may get off lightly as I said before, without the medical services being overwhelmed.

    Until that is until the next one!!


  44. @ Robert

    Epidemiologists in the UK say on average every asymptomatic victim of coronavirus infects three others and they in turn go on to infect three others each. I suspect the contagion is more widespread in Barbados than officials are admitting.
    What about our frontline workers? Do they have protection equipment? Do we have a decent number of ICU beds? I still think we need a task force and a panel of experts, of which you should be one.


  45. So far, according to https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/ none of our 17 cases have become critical.

    It is a war we are fighting and it will end leaving its scars and the need for reflection.


  46. @ Hal March 24, 2020 7:27 AM

    The Cubans are well trained and are at the cutting edge of research. These jokers cannot compete in the research area with the Cubans. UWI here in Barbados had to import a research scientist to teach the medical doctors how to do scientific research. Do you know that research scientists have little regard for medical doctors ? Most of the advances in the medical area have done by scientists( molecular biologists, microbiologists, physicists ,engineers) .For example MRI,C scan etc.


  47. I would buy “humanitarian” gesture if Trinidad was wrecked with civil or domestic strife, if it was wrecked by some act of God e.g. hurricane, earthquake, floods etc. but Trinidad has a functioning Gov’t and life continues there as it continues in Barbados despite the threat of virus or other malady. Successive Trinidad Gov’ts want to have its cake and eat it too; CCJ? we want the seat but we won’t refer our cases to it; we want our own International cricket team; we want to establish our own University we even want to claim maritime limits that extend to Barbados coastline. When economic downturns come “we are not an ATM”.

    Anyone who thinks that the action of the Barbados Gov’t will make T&T look bad is in for a rude awakening, they will just revel in the fact that they pulled a fast one over those “smart” bajans.


  48. @ Robert

    In my youth I had two close friends who were doctors – at different times.


  49. Political posturing is what Mia does best
    The past day events now dubbed the 35 has shown that Mia can be as political as any as she can get
    Even if it means putting barbadian health above all else
    35 elderly people coming from Corona infected areas and rather than constitutionally fight the govt for the entry of these 35
    Mia says Ok no problem bring them in
    Where are the big shot blabber mouths that support every sh.it Mia does

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