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Submitted by Tee White (article submitted to the Nation newspaper)

Dear Editor

I was shocked to read your article in the Nation of 18 June, which reported that Minister of Culture, John King, is opposed to ‘dumping Nelson’.

Mr King is, of course, right that everybody can form their own personal opinions about any issue, including that of racism. However, the problem is that as Minister of Culture, he represents the people of Barbados. How would it reflect on our country if in international meetings he is defending the maintenance of statues glorifying racists and mass murderers even as countries all over the world are removing these offensive objects from the public space?

Mr King says that he has been reading the cabinet papers from previous discussions of this matter but demonstrates a shocking lack of understanding of the issue. I will pass without comment his preposterous statement that removing symbols that glorify racism, such as Nelson’s statue, amounts to visiting the horrors of chattel slavery on others. He appears to think that taking a stand against racism amounts to excluding non-Africans from the history of Barbados. According to this logic, every Bajan of non-African descent supports anti-African racism and the glorification of its architects. This is a terrible insult to those Bajans of non-African descent who strongly oppose racism and also demand the removal of statues and monuments that glorify it. Is John King not aware that the earliest rebellions in Barbados saw enslaved Africans and indentured Irish people fighting together against the oppressive powers of that time? Does he not see across the whole globe that millions of people of all nationalities and colours are taking a united stand against racism, and those who seek to glorify it?

The thing is that the foundation of racism, upon which modern Barbados was established, cannot be incorporated into any new Barbados in which we simply see each other as human beings because racism is opposed exactly to this concept and insists on categorising people into superior and inferior groups. That is why today, people are demanding that racism has no place in the modern world. You cannot defend racism and its symbols and at the same time claim to be against it. Would anyone take Germany seriously if it claimed to be against Nazism while maintaining statues and other monuments glorifying Hitler and the other leaders of the Nazi regime?

I wonder if Mr King’s comments about the parliament building, the wharf and elsewhere are serious comments. If they are, he really does have no understanding of this issue. Wasn’t Barbados itself around during slavery and playing a part in it? What are we to do with it? Throw it in the sea? The demand is very clear. Statues and monuments are some of the ways in which society honours individuals from the past. Those that glorify racists and people involved in the commission of crimes against humanity should be taken down from the public space because they are a statement that the society honours racism and crimes against humanity in the here and now.

There are, of course, many other issues in Barbados that need to be addressed in order to build a new and inclusive society that works for all Barbadians. However, we will make no headway with these if we are unable to confront and overcome the monster of racism that still disfigures our island. The taking down of Nelson is a small step in this effort.

On this issue, Minister King is quite simply wrong.

Read Minister John King’s article published in the Nation newspaper 18 June 2020


 

King not on board with dumping Nelson

MINISTER OF CULTURE John King is not in support of the wholesale removal of Lord Nelson’s statue in The City.

He told the media yesterday his opinions on Nelson and race on the whole were personal and he would stick by them, even if they cost him.

“There are a number of papers I am now studying, from about 2009, on discussions various Cabinets would have had on this issue, but on a personal note – and I know what I am about to say is going to upset a lot of people – I would agree that if you’re talking about Heroes Square,there are validations to the varied opinions. But I will not – and it could cost me everything – be a part or party of trying to do to others what we say has been done to us,” he said.

Calls for the removal of the statue were made again during last Saturday’s protest march through Bridgetown in support of the Black Lives Matter movement in the United Sates and across the world.

King said he did not believe in “stripping down everything and throwing it away”, saying there was a history before slavery and it was now time for a new mindset.

“If you are saying that during enslavement and the colonisation process, that our history, culture and way of life were wiped out and we came into places like the Americas as minorities, why would you now turn around and advocate to do the same thing to somebody else? The discussion we should be having is, if we want to remove this statue, where do we put it?

“How do we recognise the collective history of Barbados is not relegated solely to Barbadians of Afro descent? How do we also incorporate the history of the indigenous people who were here [first]? How do you incorporate

all of the groups that make up Barbados? Let us look at these things for what they are and use them to inspire ourselves to change our prejudices and look at each other as human beings,” he urged.

King said the Parliament Buildings

and the Wharf were around during slavery and played a part in it, asking if those too should be thrown away. He said the Nelson statue should be utilised to the advantage of Barbados while not disadvantaging anyone.

As for the Black Lives Matter movement, King, who as a calypsonian and Pic-O-De-Crop monarch performed social commentaries such as

Fool’s Paradise, How Many More? and I Want A Plantation, said he was accustomed to speaking out against social injustice on his own and would only join any group if and when he felt it necessary.

“I’ve always been advocating against racism, as an entertainer performing overseas and from growing up in England, so I know it well. What is going on in the Unites States has been going on for eons but it is now easier to see due to social media.

“[However] there are other issues right here I don’t hear people talking about, issues some people don’t want to protest, such as classism, which is also a knee on people’s necks. We need to talk about the violence in our own communities . . . and I don’t hear anyone talking about the history of the people we call ‘red legs’ in St John. I hope our future generations find themselves in a different place,” he said.

(CA)

 


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598 responses to “Minister John King is Wrong”


  1. The wonderful thing about BU is that we go round and round in circles. A few years ago we had this very discussion, round about the time of the CCJ judgement, and I said that when mothers went to register births they should be compelled to name the fathers. If the men denied it, then they would be ordered by the courts to give a DNA test.
    Failure to reveal the father at registration means the mother would not be allowed to claim paternity support at any time in the child’s life. A high price, but a necessary one.

  2. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ John
    The given name usually was that of the father, but the registered /baptismal name that of the mother unless she was married. The registered name was the legal name. Strangely enough,in Jamaica and Antigua children usually used their fathers name.It did not matter if the parents were unmarried.


  3. It cost about $4000 bds to get a new birth certicate with your father’s name added.

    There is a legal process.


  4. In the UK children of unmarried couples usually have the father’s surname. What we need in Barbados is for family court records to me made public after X (30) years. If you go to the archives department and ask for court records they usually send you off to the courts.


  5. You can look at the parochial registers for each parish, in some cases starting as early as 1637.

    The site is familysearch.org, click “search” then “records” then scroll down to the bottom of the page and click “Browse all published collections”.

    You then need to select Barbados Church Records 1637 – 1887 with the camera icon beside it.

    From there you can choose the parish etc and get the scans of the original parochial register.

    They are indexed so if you know the name you want fill in the blanks after Search Records.

    The more info you know the less hits you will get.

    You can put in Horatio for first name, leave the surname blank and then click on Any and put in Barbados to limit the records to Barbados.

    That will give you all the baptisms and marriages of anyone named Horatio in Barbados between 1637 and 1887.

    If you leave the country blank it will give you all the Horatio’s in the world, or atleast in the Data Collections they have available.


  6. Mary Ann got her freedom after her first two children!!


  7. … and then Robert Cooper Ashby left her and her children equal shares in a 310 acre plantation and in another one whose acreage I forget.

    Same sort of thing as the owners of Haggatt Hall, Vaucluse and Dunscombe.

    Standard procedure.


  8. It is not our duty here in Barbados to lead some kind of proxy fight for the race wars in the USA and UK. There is no worldwide solidarity among whites or blacks. A black American is an American first and foremost.

    I would like to point out once again that the black population of the United States does not give a damn about Barbados. Obama and his Attorney General Holder have even actively promoted the destruction of our island by launching a campaign at the OECD together with the Europeans against tax havens.

    A second example: in the 1970s, Guyana provided large amounts of aid to African states. What happened after Guyana collapsed? Zero aid from Africa.

  9. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ Hants at 3:16 PM

    At first registration. It costs nothing if the father is the registrant , has the appropriate ID etc and consent of mother,. I am relying on my understanding of 10 years ago. I am not a lawyer.


  10. “Mary Ann got her freedom after her first two children!!”

    she had a very tight pussy that could hold onto a little dick and squeeze it


  11. You fail to understand what is BLM and why it is a totally different issue from local racist tribal politics or high crime in T&T. People of all races all over the world are supporting the BLM cause because it is the decent & right thing to do. Everyone should try to understand that the BLM cause is not anti any particular race. This issue is way more important that the local racial problems and we should try not to trivialize it by looking for its relevance here in T&T. Yes, there is racism by many of ALL races in T&T against other races. NO, that does not mean BLM is “a farce” in T&T.

    Source: TT social media


  12. #BLACKLIVESMATTER

    The # Hashtag makes things go viral

    #CHINESEKUNGFU

    Slavery debate is whitewashed by people with white faces

    The Devil Can’t Sing Amazing Grace


  13. What’s the topic again? What is on anyone’s birth certificate should be of interest to them and their immediate family but as usual John’s modus operandi is to introduce completely irrelevant topics and people blindly follow him along that path.

    How about a calypsonian/cum politician/cum Minister of Culture who expresses an opinion that in 21st century Barbados a British Admiral who fought to preserve slavery deserves pride and place at the intersection of Barbados main thoroughfare within spitting distance of the legislative chamber. A politician who when faced with an issue of critical importance is the first to say “there are more important issues to talk about”

    There is a adage currently in vogue “ If you don’t stand for something, you’ll fall for anything” this seems to sum up some in present day Barbados.


  14. @Sargeant

    And those who accuse BU commenters of having a short attention span follow dear John down the rabbit hole like dutifull children.


  15. Details on a birth/baptismal certificate are not just for the individual and family. It is a legal document and as such is a public document. That is why the public have access to the register of births, marriages and deaths.
    Inheritance, dear boy. Inheritance.

  16. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David that 4:10 PM TnT post is an excellent summary of all our various verbiage…But I must repeat my mantra that ‘educated’ people do NOT “fail to understand what is BLM” they simple have that cognitive dissonant psych problem…

    When the VP of US refused to echo the simple words that Black Lives Matter but rather resolutely intoned ‘All Lives Matter’ I am sure he grasped the context, meaning and the push for equanimity of that BLM refrain but refused to acknowledge its impact and cowardly feigned non-comprehension by jaw-boning the politically correct alternative phrase.

    BTW Impeach this man..he fires yet ANOTHER legal adversary who is investigating him or his associates.. how brazenly corrupted can one POTUS be.. oh, right he’s already impeached. He can do whatever he chooses!

    I hope when our president starts firing left, right and center that we have better control. Just saying! 🙂

    Wait tho what become of the DLPs ‘fanfanatic’ blogger????

  17. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    LOL @Mr Blogmaster….re:“And those who accuse BU commenters of having a short attention span follow their John down the rabbit hole like dutifull children,”

  18. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    Did i not tell yall that ya two dirty half human governments are pure evil running back 2 generations, toxic sell.out bloodlines of the black variety. Did i not also tell ya that UKs rejects descended from the original rejects UK kicked out in the 16th century.or there abouts are parasites liars, thieves and frauds. Well listen for yourselves. It’s repulsive .

    https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10158106429536265&id=579736264&sfnsn=scwspwa&extid=SQDx9zYmaeftH50W&d=w&vh=i

  19. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    …LOL @Mr Blogmaster….re:“And those who accuse BU commenters of having a short attention span follow dear John down the rabbit hole like dutifull children,”some”*,,, some rabbit holes are more accommodating than others, just as some Johns are better than others!

    The naming thing was a lark of course but the final turn on the efficacy of birth/baptismal certification was cool, All we needed (and this still on topic) was for someone to pull the certification for the Admiral and attest to his less than pristine lineage or even better tell us how many children he had out of wedlock…

    After all the main point of Min. King’s ridiculousness was made 300 blog posts ago (this is the second or is it third on this subject)… so new rabbit holes get more appealing after 100 or more screeds!

    I gone.


  20. I could have sworn this blog had something or the other to do with Horatio Nelson.

  21. Freedom Crier Avatar

    EMANCIPATE YOURSELF FROM MENTAL SLAVERY!!

    …As a people we need to learn to live with our history. It is ours. It cannot be rewritten. We need to move forward and make new history, tell our story regarding the current time so that those that come after can learn something about us living now. And it is something that we really need to pay attention to as we live in a digital world full os selfies, facebook, whatsapp and email which probably will not be accessible in years to come to tell our story. We will truly be a lost generation.
    …Just imagine fighting to be named a Heritage Centre and then in the same breath fighting to dismantle it

    …That is why I say move forward and make new history. Leave what is there. With the line of argument being touted we could easily end up getting rid of everything in our move to cleanse the island of ‘unhappy’ symbols. People keep on mentioning that Nelson is in Heroes Square but they seem to forget that Heroes Square came and found him there.

    …without African involvement there would not have been a slave trade.
    Many chose to forget that and they are guilty for the part that they played but that does not make the other side any less guilty

    …AGAIN NELSON NEVER OWNED SLAVES

    …It was the local people both whites and blacks who not only wanted it but paid for it out of their own pocket. The government did not pay for it. Just imagine a local stature being put up now. If that depended on everyday people paying for it, It would never see the day of light.

    …Do we need to go through life removing things just because we don’t like them ? Barbados is full of buildings, etc that can be taken as being symbolic of periods best forgotten. Do we go through the island tearing down, moving, destroying all of these items because of what they stood for? If our minds were not still enslaved so to speak we would not be reacting in this manner. We need to free our minds of mental slavery to borrow the words from an enlightened one. Just my thoughts.

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10157064531117021&set=pcb.10157064665747021&type=3&theater&ifg=1


  22. “Details on a birth/baptismal certificate are not just for the individual and family. It is a legal document and as such is a public document. That is why the public have access to the register of births, marriages and deaths.
    Inheritance, dear boy. Inheritance.”

    Registering a birth hands over legal rights to the state. There was a Case in UK where the Courts ordered a Woman to put her children into care but they were unable to enact the order one of the children as her birth had not been registered.

  23. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    Have your useless leaders no shame, they think Black people’s lives is just their plaything..,,them and their no good minorities..

    they don’t know what a revolution is, and as if that is not bad enuff..am here hoping that some kinda treason charges can be found for what they have done. for 2 generations of their version of Black rule…complete with racist and aparthied rule…..now that would be sweet, then they will learn the true definition of the treason they so love to threatein Black people with just to get their thrills…

    am sure they feel real good that it’s all out in the open, what a weight they have been carrying around and trying to cover up for years, they should feel so much better now, wuh one of their own minorities RATTED them out already….lol


  24. I was looking back at a headline in the Nation from Friday May 14 1999.

    It read simply “LEAVE NELSON”

    “Poll shows two-thirds want statue to stay”


  25. How can John King be wrong?


  26. @ WURA-War-on-U,
    Thanks for the video of today’s rally.
    @ Vincent Carrington,
    You are an intelligent men who holds very firm and entrenched views. It would be good if you could get hold of the remarkable James Baldwin film / documentary entitled: I Am Not Your Negro.

    Part of the link below was included in the documentary.


  27. A SOLID MAJORITY of Barbadians have said “no” to the proposed removal of the statue of Lord Nelson from the renamed National Heroes Square. But nearly as many agree with the renaming of Trafalgar Square. That’s according to a recent opinion poll on two of the most controversial and intertwined public issues, probably in a generation, which have dominated radio call-in programmes and letters columns in the Press in the last six weeks.
    Nearly two-thirds – 59 per cent – of the 500 respondents said “no” when asked whether they felt the statue should be moved, but 53 per cent said “yes” to renaming the square. According to the April 21-22 SYSTEMS Caribbean Ltd. poll, which noted age, sex and parish of residence, those in favour of retaining the statue were found in higher proportions among females, those under 30, and those residing in St. Joseph, St. Thomas, St. Peter, St. John, St. George, St. Philip and Christ Church.
    Three in ten (31 per cent) agreed the statue should be relocated and were found moreso among males, those in the 30-44 years age group, and those residing in St. Andrew, St. Michael, St. James, and St. Lucy. One in ten either gave a “no” response or indicated they did not care.
    Those agreeing to the renaming of the square were found in higher proportions among males, those in the 30-years and-older age group, and those residing in St. Thomas, St. Lucy, St. George, St. Michael, St. James, and St. Peter.
    About four in ten (39 per cent) felt that the square should not be renamed National Heroes Square. They were found moreso among those in the under-30 group, and those from Christ Church, St. Philip, St. John, St. Andrew, and St. Joseph. Smaller groups indicated that they did not care (6 percent), while others (2 per cent) did not respond.
    SYSTEMS said there was, as could be expected, some correlation between supporters of relocating the statue and renaming the square. There was also some correlation between those not in favour of either the relocating or the renaming.
    Of those respondents who favoured relocation, the majority (88 per cent) also favoured the renaming; similarly, of those against, about six in ten 59 percent were also not very keen on the name change. The majority of those saying “yes” to the name change were from St. Thomas (68 percent) while the largest segment of “no” voters (63 per cent) came from St. Andrew.

  28. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ TLSN at 6 :59 PM

    Thanks very much for the reference cited above. Those who know Vincent Codrington would attest to the fact that he is a well read man. Since Baldwin wrote for the American negro with their particular experiences, I think it would be beneficial for me to concentrate on the Afro Barbadian problem and look for solutions to our own particular problems.. Even in Baldwin’s case what he said then was relevant in his era,it cannot be useful to the present issues facing the American negro in 2020. Time has changed. The issues require a different approach now.
    TLSN it is not what you have read ,IT IS ABOUT APPLICABILITY TO SOLUTIONS OF CURRENT PROBLEMS.

  29. Vincent Codrington Avatar
    Vincent Codrington

    @ TLSN

    May I suggest that you spend the hour and 30 minutes and view the film uploaded by John. It may give you an insight into the history of the CIVIL RIGHTS movement in the 1960s . What they have achieved and where Civil Rights are at 2020 in the USA


  30. To all of you: As you once again fail to reach an agreement, I propose as a mediatory solution (as mentioned several times before) to replace Lord Nelson with Prime Minister Mia Mottley and Goddess Bim. Then neutral observers like me would finally have a reason to visit Bridgetown every evening and worship the monument.


  31. Trump rally flops!

    Wuhlaus!

    Overflow rally cancelled. No crowd. Empty seats inside arena. Only half full.

    Wuhlaus!

    In a deep red state.

    Wuhlaus!

    The man is a relic playing to fossils.

    The world is moving on!


  32. Almost forgot the six advance team members who tested positive for corona virus.

    Wuhlaus!


  33. Now watching but media not showing crowd.

    Sure sign crowd inside is good.


  34. Figured he would let situation in Seattle simmer …. free campaign ad!!


  35. @ Donna June 20, 2020 9:11 PM

    Your “favourite” politician not only endangers human lives in the USA, but also our economy and people. Thanks to his failed disease control, America is the Corona Mecca. Every plane from the USA to Barbados is a biological weapon of mass destruction.

  36. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    I am getting reports that PM Mottley says that she in in favour of moving the statue of Nelson to a maritime museum. John king says that he has been misquoted and wants him moved to a maritime museum as well.

    It sounds to me that they are preparing to just shift him tho the other side of the careenage over by the old screw dock.

    I think a maritime location will be suitable as long as it is at least 10 metres underwater.


  37. @PLT
    Thanks for the heads up. They are trying to square the circle and appease the racists whose money they have taken. The main thing is it must come down. There is no maritime museum in existence and under IMF/BERT austerity, there’s no money to set one up. So the realistic options are either like you suggest in the Careenage or to put it in one of the rooms at the museum and ask Trevor Marshall to write the display putting it in context: why the planters erected it, the struggle to take it down and it’s final removal. I’m looking forward with interest to see what the yardfowls who have been defending the statue staying in place are going to say now that the party line has changed and their leader is in favour of taking it down.


  38. @ peterlawrencethompson June 20, 2020 11:02 PM

    Our leader proves once again good judgement. So let’s move the old Nelson to the Maritime Museum – as soon as we have built one after the tenth IMF programme in 2100. In the meantime, I suggest we also erect a statue of Mia Mottley, the president of our hearts, on Heroes’ Square.

    Nelson thus behaves in the same way as the repayment of the BOSS bonds: All these things are postponed until the day hell freezes over with ice.

    Whoever rebels in the meantime and dumps Nelson into the sea will be given the maximum penalty: One year of service at the Barbadian Embassy in New York City, the largest and worst white pestilence hole on earth. That’s almost as bad as the death penalty.

  39. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    “I am getting reports that PM Mottley says that she in in favour of moving the statue of Nelson to a maritime museum. John king says that he has been misquoted and wants him moved to a maritime museum as well.”

    Mia is still taking this evil shit, fraud, captured slaves crimes she and her predecessor BLACK FACE negros and stink minoritiy thieves have been perpetrating on the Black population for DECADES…she thinks this is something that they are not going TO PAY FOR…

    they have to be removed from the parliament in 2023…no ifs ands or buts, so the house ni*ger the Johnnie can start saving the taxpayer funded paychecks that he is obviously STEALING…from BLACK PEOPLE…..

    they have made it very plain in the last 60 years that ones elected they only live off the Black population so they can please and serve a minority of THIEVES and RACISTS at the Black population’s expense.

    Bajans have to learn the art OF STARVING the racist minorities, they don’t have enough money to last them into nest year…..STARVE THEM OFF THE ISLAND, the Black population holds all the power to circulate the money right into the hands of these small time thieves, stop spending your money with minoritites who hate you, SHUT THEM DOWN, CHASE THEM OFF THE ISLAND….fcuk sell out Mia and all the other sell outs who entered that parliament in the last 60 years both dead and alive…shut their shit down of robbing generations of black people and then kick these dirty black people out, they do not represent you nor your best interests…THEY ARE NOT YOUR LEADERS…they are house ni*gers for minorities, i have told you this over and over, those who are in certain circles know this and voice among themselves over and over, it’s no secret in certain circles, i have said this already..

    I made sure to spread these evil crimes against Black people on the island across the earth….people are STUNNED that black leaders would be so EVIL IN MIND to commit these crimes REPEATEDLY against their own oppressed people, the majority population AND SEE NOTHING WRONG WITH NONE OF IT….IT HAD TO BE EXPOSED….IT CANNOT CONTINUE..

  40. Harold Austin Avatar

    @TLSN

    Jimmy Baldwin was a great an and spoke to the universality of our blackness and across generations. There is nothing unique about Bajan blackness, apart from ass ignorance.
    By the way, and this is not off message, the Cabinet Office is now asking for recommendations for national awards. I plead with the BU commentariat, whatever they may think of national awards, to recommend Professor Keith Arlington Patrick Sandiford for our highest national award.
    Professor Sandiford, is not only a Bayland man of the soil, he is our greatest living historian; in a culture that celebrates mediocrity, this genuinely world class historian, deserves to be recognised now he is alive, unlike that terrible wrong we did to Kamau (only to offer him a national funeral service).


  41. ass should read mass….my ‘m’ is sticking.

  42. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    THE UNIFICATION OF THE AFRICAN DESCENDED…

    colonial house ni*gers, house slaves and the plain stupid slaveminded or NOT INVITED…

    https://youtu.be/sMPGWNWraQQ?t=20

  43. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    House negros of parliament IN BARBADOS gotta be crazy to think they are getting away with NORMALIZING racism, hatred, oppression and bondage against THE SAME BLACK POPULATION as they have done FOR 60 YEARS….same black population WHO FUND THE ISLAND AND ARE ROBBED GENERATIONALLY by racist minority thieves and parasites FORCED into the lives of the majority black population ..it will NOT be allowed to continue into another generation..

    sell out Mia can put that in her Marijuana pipe and smoke it..


  44. The Trump brand is now as popular as the RAC and DOY brands that were used to Brand the West Africans who were taken by the Royal African Company run by Duke of York brother of Charles II and later took the throne as James II Royal family. Those diagrams of Slave Ships you see are actually blueprints drawn up by the architects for the middle passage project.


  45. look, people, the statue just wants pulling down, dragging across the road and dumping in the careenage. if tourists or local bajans, white or black, want to see it they can either free dive or scuba dive.

    if is quite instructive that JK said he was misquoted, if true. i would like to know what he said actually and how he was misquoted and why it took so long for him to correct the record?


  46. @ Vincent Codrington, June 20, 2020 7:46 PM,

    Baldwin’s speech to the Oxford Union is as relevant now as it was back in 1965. I would urge you once more to obtain a copy of “I Am Not Your Negro” which was released in 2013. It will put everything into context.

    The Negro problem of the USA is no different to the Negro problem that exists in Barbados 2020. How does Barbados integrate its 90% plus black majority population to become prosperous stakeholders in a country in which they have resided for over four centuries? The Negro problem is an international problem.

    Hal Austin, a few weeks ago, made an extraordinary statement. He claimed that after our independence, public buildings and institutions were renamed. For example, our national hospital was renamed the “Queen Elizabeth Hospital”!!!

    Is it any wonder why certain individuals cannot stomach the removal of Lord Nelson’s statue. We are trapped with our colonial legacy and must do our best to dismantle that part of it which is detrimental towards our mental and psychological welfare.

    Nelson must be removed from his pedestal.

    Here is the full Oxford Union debate between James Baldwin Debates William F. Buckley (1965)

  47. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    The BLACK MAJORITY POPULATION IN BARBADOS MUST RISE UP…and protect themselves and their future generations, your black leaders are wicked and will ALWAYS work against, they have the Syrian Cartel contolling your parliament, they have racist minoritites robbing you generationally for the last 2 generations, what more do you need to know to protect yourself and RID THE ISLAND OF ALL OF THEM…

    and may i add…FCUK THE SELL OUT NI*GERS.

    “Juneteenth, the holiday recognizing the end of slavery in the U.S., was marked by widespread celebrations across the country yesterday—bringing a bright spot of joy in a year that’s left the Black community experiencing more than its fair share of sorrow.

    Beyoncé helped make the day a special one by releasing a new song “Black Parade,” on Tidal, Spotify, and other music streaming platforms on Friday night in honor of Juneteenth. The jubilant anthem invites listeners to celebrate the beauty of blackness, and Beyoncé ’s powerful voice rings out over an instrumental that is reminiscent of Africa.

    In her now-signature rapping and singing style, talks her Beyoncé shit in the song:

    Need peace and reparation for my people (Woo)
    Fuck these laid edges, I’ma let it shrivel up (Shrivel up)
    Fuck this fade and waves I’ma let it dread all up (Dread all up)
    Put your fists up in the air, show black love (Show black love)
    Motherland drip on me, motherland, motherland drip on me

    Among my favorite lines from the song are:

    Being black, baby that’s the reason why they always mad.
    Been past em’, I know that’s the reason why they all big mad and they always have been.

    And

    Put us any-damn-where, we gon’ make it look cute

    Cuz, where’s the lie?

    In a note posted on her official website, Beyoncé revealed that the proceeds of “Black Parade” will be used to benefit black-owned small businesses in need—an especially worthy cause since such businesses have been disproportionately shuttered as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

    Black Barbados don’t even have ENOUGH black businesses to shutter, the house ni*gers for racist minorities ROBBED YOU OF THAT TOO..

  48. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    TLSN…dont waste your energy, only the STING OF THE SLAVE WHIP can change the views of the pretend coloreds who HATE being BLACK…..and even that might never work, so brain damaged they are especially when they carry evil slavemaster’s name that they are proud of, even though they were BRED TO BE SLAVES…..bred to be slaveminded

    they are the Black Skin White Mask BRIGADE that Franz Fanon spoke about in his book that applies to any generation of slaveminded blacks, as long as they keep coming back…their bloodlines have to die off completely to be rid of them….it will take a few more generations to get these bred slaves off the earth..


  49. Have you read these comments and try to figure out who is ‘black’ and who is ‘white’? You cannot use that simple classification here. I have been forced to move folks from the black column to the white column. Interestingly, those that I thought white remain in the white column.

    I seem to recall one blogger had difficulty with referring to some Bajans as black. ‘Pelau’ was the way he referred to Bajans.
    I

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