The climate developing countries have to manage affairs of state appears to be very challenging at this time. Barbados the former colony can no longer expect to hide or be protected by England. There was a time we benefited from preferential trade treatment which seemed fair in a dog eat dog world where the ‘strongest’ always has the best chance to navigate challenges.

In a post 54th independence period sensible Barbadians are forced to reflect and to ask – where do we go from here?

Some debate whether the decline of the Barbados economy (and society) started in the 70s, what is for certain is that the decline accelerated after the 2008 global recession. The structure of our economy with an over reliance on services made us extremely vulnerable to significant slowdown in the world economy. Unfortunately we have been unable to patch the vulnerability which has been exposed again by the Covid 19 pandemic.

Reading many comments on BU and listening to commentary elsewhere, it has become painfully obvious despite the dark challenges facing Barbados there are unrealistic expectations the leadership of the country has not address. Barbadians for many years have enjoyed a reasonable standard of living supported by deficit financing in the post Barrow period. There is nothing wrong with spending more than you earn but it is a practice which cannot be sustained. Successive governments in the last four decades have borrowed heavily to pursue national budget objects. We can continue to quibble about who to blame and see where that get us.

The blogmaster is palpably aware from walking among Barbadians on a daily basis that many are suffering from a form of ‘Alice in Wonderland Syndrome’. At a household level commonsense would dictate that supporting a lifestyle of spending more than one earns will lead eventually to a problem. Why do Barbadians expect a different outcome if successive governments continue to engage in reckless financial management? We have spent billions on education, should citizens possess the awareness to translate it to a strident lobby against the establishment to ensure realistic policy decisions are implemented? What about other key stakeholders in civil society like media houses/practitioners and NGO groups?

In the 54 Not Out blog there is a cursory discussion about local media. We have a David Ellis who has been the standout media person in Barbados over the years but a single journalist will not do it. Also we do not have the columnists of the past who provoked deep thought in the population the likes of Oliver Jackman, Gladstone Holder, Leonard Shorey to name only three. Active NGO groups are important as well because interest can be more forcefully represented in numbers. We are at a place in Barbados all problems must be solved by the government. To move forward we must implement a fit for purpose governance model. The reactionary approach to managing our affairs will not deliver meaningful long term results. We fail to plan, we plan to fail.

This morning as the blogmaster sips from a cup of peppermint tea alone with his thoughts, it is clear the country is suffering from a ‘fatigue’, especially wrought by the post 2008 period. This was compounded by a severe policy prescription that has decimated the hopes and dreams of the middleclass forced to witness a manhandling of nest eggs in the most unprecedented way. Finally came Covid 19.

The unprecedented times in which we live demands a degree of planning and collaboration between stakeholders in civil society never envisaged. The blogmaster is unable to reconcile conversations emanating from the mouths of key actors given what the national imperatives should be. Propping up a lifestyle fuelled by conspicuous consumption must be addressed. Calibrating our educations system to produce citizens who can compete to support themselves. Dismantling sub cultures and replace with initiatives to nurture national pride. The forgoing should positively impact crime. Last but not least the environment. We have to care about the space in which we have to exist.

No more tea…

Discuss for 15 marks.

267 responses to “Message to Barbadians”


  1. Did they deport my mother, you ass? She did not even lose her job!


  2. Boy, I gotta go! The blood is pounding in my head. I can hear it in my ears! That stupid bitch got me so damn angry. She is not worth it.

    Bloody stupid bitch!


  3. Mia getting us in a debt trap…

    https://youtu.be/d7KEp9wuFSE


  4. Mia has sold out Barbados to the IMF; World Bank/ Western Imperialist .

    https://youtu.be/aSJxbH_hfaE


  5. I don’t need any biography from idiots, am not going to read it, waste of energy, I tend to conserve mine….hope the blood does more than pound.


  6. Why the developing world ( including Barbados) remains trapped in debt to the western financial system ( Ponzi schemes).

    https://youtu.be/s9K07n0__80

  7. Piece the Prophet Avatar
    Piece the Prophet

    @ Mr. Hal Austin,

    You said, and de ole man quotes

    “…I can understand why he (Ezra Alleyne the man whom yo may remember as one of the earliest BLP lawyers debarred in the 70’s?) could have such a mistaken view of our constitutional arrangement, since a strong prime minister can usurp the powers of parliament and of the Head of State.

    We have seen that recently with Mottley, both at Owen Arthur’s funeral – which officially was a State Funeral, therefore should have been head by the Governor General – and the Independence Day, a state occasion.

    We have also seen the abuse of the Governor General during the Queen’s Speech with 52 pages or rambling, rhetorical stuff that could have been delivered in at most 45 minutes, rather than the near three hours it took.”

    Today you have spoken a gem of truth that will go missing in the melee that is ensuing around you.

    Today you have highlighted how this so called luminary Ezra Alleyne IS SINGING FOR HIS SUPPER AT THE ADIPOSE LIPS OF THE DICTATOR MIA MUGABE!

    Today you have deconstructed the literary hog shyte that Ezra Alleyne posted in this submission that should get a blog of its own here on Barbados Underground BUT IT WILL NOT!

    Because these truths you have enunciated though self evident ARE DANGEROUS!

    You broke down every single line of the Alleyne Lie that supports the coming Republic Dictatorship for Life of Mugabe Mottley!

    You have shown how Mugabe Mottley has merged all three powers under her single rule.

    Like her hero Putin

    While stupid bajans looking at Covid-19 vaccines and Nelson Moving and Virtual We Gaddering

    WHILE GETTING BULLED!


  8. Boy, I gotta go! The blood is pounding in my head. I can hear it in my ears! That stupid bitch got me so damn angry. She is not worth it.

    Bloody stupid bitch!

    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    THIS IS COMING FROM A LOCAL WOMAN THAT LIKES TO PORTRAY HERSELF ALWAYS AS A VICTIM AND PLEASE FEEL SORRY FOR ME.

    HAS SUCH DISRESPECTFUL WORDS TO ANOTHER WOMAN,

    WONDERS NEVER CEASE.

    VERY CHILDISH AND PETTY.

    MUST BE AN EFFECT OF THE 2 x 3 ISLAND.

    PURE PURE HYPOCRISY..

  9. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Piece
    You said” Today you have spoken a gem of truth that will go missing in the melee that is ensuing around you.” You are correct about @ Hal superbly written article.
    @Hal
    A very impressive piece. I don’t comprehend how anybody can seriously praise the pitiful BLP propganda columns of Ezra Alleyene. Alleyne is now a mere shadow of the promise he showed when he entered politics and the country was impressed with him as a rising star on the political scene.
    @Donna,
    The clarification is appreciated. Thanks
    Peace


  10. @ Donna & the Draytons have it wrong about milk.
    https://youtu.be/XT5IczyhFGQ


  11. @William

    Thanks. I have great appreciation for Ezra, that generation just below John Connell and Calvin Alleyne; and it was enhanced when he started teaching law before returning to Barbados.
    Sometimes he gets it, not so much wrong, but fails to keep up. There are two sides to the law, the theory and the practice. In Barbados we are familiar with the practice: robes, theatre, etc. But we are lacking in discussing the theory. Often we get the two mixed up.
    But for the uninitiated, law and finance are twins; the law of contract, pensions law, regulation, etc. The same with sports/entertainment and the law. Law is a popular second degree in the UK.
    There is also an ignorance of specialist law; if you want to know about welfare law, will you go to a young man or woman in a robe, who came out of college two months ago, or to an experienced social worker?
    If you want to know about industrial relations law will you go to a leading QC who has only done criminal work or to a leading trade union official? A right to appear before a judge and knowledge of the law are two different things.
    But, on BU, even questions of as objective as law and the constitution become party political or personal issues. It is the Bajan Condition.

  12. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Hal
    I had the opportunity of hearing a young Alleyne speak on his party’s platforms and in Parliament. I remember him driving his superbly kept title Morris Minor, quickly building a reputation as a fine lawyer and future PM. Always smiling articulate and affable . I don’t know the man that has reduced himself to a propaganda machine, using his legal writing skills to basically mislead readers.
    As for those who come on BU positing everything in pure party positions, it looks like the sheer stamina of @Mariposa is getting the better of her opponents ,on the other side , at this time. After all who can defend a PM , who calls workers protests “ spectacles” and tells them to behave properly for “ outsiders”.
    For me there is nothing more relaxing than seeing the political cannibals devour each other. That’s what they do best!
    Peace


  13. @William

    You are being very dramatic. Which prime minister or leader of an enterprise would not appeal for calm at a difficult time for the country or business? Should she have said the opposite? Context man!

    Defend the workers we must but uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.

  14. William Skinner Avatar

    @David
    I know , what I heard and read what my Prime Minister said. She needs to apologise to the workers.
    You are incapable of defending the working class. I have all your responses to attacks on the corporate class. You have defended them 85% of the time. You have no authority to tell me about context. You only know about that when it comes to the BLP.
    Let me stay emotional. Thank you very much.
    Peace


  15. @William

    The Prime Minister overseas the country, not just the working class. The job of any prime minister is to ensure the environment of the whole country supports all classes. The blogmaster like you can have any opinion he damn well pleases.


  16. (Quote):
    Defend the workers we must but uneasy lies the head that wears a crown.
    (Unquote).
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    That piece of timely advice also applied when a ‘blue(s)’ head wearing a yellow crown (of economic thorns) was served with a letter of ultimatum and over 5,000 marched in Bridgetown headed by a pied piper dressed in the ‘politically colourful’ white.

    The more administrations change the more they do the same crap.

    ‘Those who live in glass houses should not throw stones (even from the shade).’

    Karma can be a bitch (of any colour)!


  17. @Miller

    This iOS true and you and others have discussed the tactics of opposition politics compared to when in government.

    #keepingitrealalways

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