The Adrian Loveridge Column usually occupies this space on Monday mornings. The blogmaster takes this opportunity to thank Adrian for being a strident social commentator over the years and willingness to enter the BU fray, especially as it relates to promoting and defending the tourism sector he is very familiar. The BU household extends best wishes as he takes a voluntary timeout to ‘recharge’ – David, blogmaster 

The market certainly doesn’t know! The massive public financing in many places is nothing more than a band-aid, it is when that dressing is removed, we will see who has healed and can function, and who needs an amputation or worse. For Barbados, the acid test will be employment.

NorthernObserver

The raging COVID 19 pandemic has hammered home a reality- individuals, organizations, governments are being forced to change business model. Specifically as it relates to E-commerce and doing business in a digital space. The new way of doing business demands a reskilling and redeployment of the workforce that must be equally supported with reallocation of budgets. In a January report prepared by Hyun Song Shin titled E-commerce in the pandemic and beyond 3-takeaways are identified:

  1. E-commerce has ramped up during the pandemic around the world. The growth has differed across sectors and over different stages of the pandemic.
  2. The growth of e-commerce has been higher in countries where there were more stringent containment measures and where e-commerce was initially less developed.
  3. Some changes in consumers’ shopping habits and payment behaviour may be longer-lasting. This may have implications for structural change and the growth of the digital economy.

There has been robust discussion in this forum recently about how we foresee business being done in Barbados. The blogmaster sides with the argument supported in the report mentioned that even before the pandemic wrecked global economies and livelihoods, there was a push to shift business and other activity from bricks-and-mortar to the digital space. Covid 19 has accelerated the shift. Welcome to a view of what a post COVID 19 landscape will look like whether we like it or not.

Another forecast coming out of the pandemic is that people will have to coexist with COVID 19 AND other viruses likely to follow. It means in the future traditional supply chains and business related travel will be disrupted. Individuals, businesses and governments are already adjusting to a post COVID 19 reality with greater use of the digital space defined as the new normal.

As expected some countries start with an advantage in the new normal space- the so-called developed world. Barbados unfortunately has been lazy to rely on manual, redundant models not fit for purpose exposed in the current environment. Our private sector is not far behind if we accept reports of disruption to large companies being attacked by ransomware, supermarkets and essential businesses unable to efficiently manage spikes in demand for services and distribution during lockdowns and so on.

What is required is a nimble approach by public and private sectors supported by NGOs to strategise next steps how as a country we narrow the gap between existing and the new business model to sustains livelihoods in a post COVID 19 world. In fact the blogmaster will be disappointed if after a year of managing the pandemic this is not a work in progress.

The blogmaster is sympathetic to the current leadership of the country demanded to manage in unprecedented times. Let the blogmaster be clear, leadership is defined as government and private sector. For too long Barbados has relied on government to lead in all areas of managing the country.

The big question: what is the strategy to reposition Barbados to be able to compete in a post COVID world?

#socialpartnership

178 responses to “Post Covid 19 World Demands New Approaches from Government and Private Sector”


  1. Here you go trying to deal the conversation with irrelevance.


  2. Hal AustinFebruary 16, 2021 9:46 AM

    Hal, I am not sure I think of it as a moral right. More as a consideration to be cooperative, if we are indeed global?

    The world is not a vacuum. It is one big cog. Without cooperation and give and take,, there is only one outcome. That may be delayed for the large and powerful, but a tsunami gets all in the end.

    So, I am not sure that it would be begging, just resetting the game.

    One thing mentioned above is population. Many populations, Japan, China, Italy, Barbados etc are ageing. This will create challenges but also opportunities.

    The youth will rush to opportunity. That itself will be a challenge, as the better skilled will be attracted by those countries who need them and can pay them more. This is one of the areas that the government needs to keep an eye on.

    Supposing, just for argument’s sake, that Canada opened its doors, with permanent citizenship, for qualified medics, nurses, electricians, computer people. You know how fast some Bajans would be outta here?

    That is a challenge and one that should be borne in mind, because the developmental repercussions would be huge. But it is also an opportunity, not only for individuals, but for such as remittances etc.


  3. Mottley also adamantly rejected any notion that the current vaccine was unsafe, as Britain itself has vaccinated over 15 million people so far with the Oxford/AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine…..(Quote)

    The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine used in the UK is made in the UK. The one used in Barbados is made in India. The Indian vaccine only has emergency approval. The UK’s has full regulatory approval.


  4. Hal AustinFebruary 16, 2021 9:52 AM

    Lol. I only use those. Benwood is, as I described, for more mirthful posts.


  5. William SkinnerFebruary 16, 2021 9:55 AM @ Hal It’s called the dependency syndrome. Old time saying: living off others.
    Close the frigging university!

    Not at all. This is not just about Barbados, but the entire Caribbean. It is about ensuring that the base to move forward is viable. The loan status needs to be addressed.


  6. @ Crusoe

    We argue all over the place. There is no moral right to forgive debt. Knowing our politicians if the debt was forgiven our politicians will claim it was their negotiating skills that won the forgiveness. Have you ever cleared credit card debt for your children only to watch helplessly as they run up more debt?
    About university fees. Yes, students should be compelled to ay, or forget the idea of university. Such a shift will create a number of payment systems – savings funds; inheritance; private loans; government loans, etc.
    When Dr Greenidge and others talk about fiscal space, the burden of university debt is a classic example of freeing up that space. What have all the lawyers done for the nation?


  7. @ John February 16, 2021 9:25 AM
    “Did you know that the oldest slave on record was 114 in 1817 and that there were several slaves who centenerians and super centenerians in the 1817 census?”

    Slaves were taken care of from cradle to grave in the socialist utopia sometimes referred to as a plantation.”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    why don’t you stop spreading propaganda to justify the ravages of chattel slavery in Barbados with your few outlier examples?

    The lifespan of the “average” black slave was not above 50 years.

    If we were to fall for your contrived statistic of an abundance of black centenarians during the cradle-to-grave sweet-life days of chattel slavery in Barbados then the anthropologist and osteologist people can anytime unearth the bones of the many black Methuselahs interred in the Newton slave burial ground.

    Next minute you will be trying to convince us that the infant mortality rate in Barbados during slavery was significantly lower than it is today.

    How about the collapse of the Bajan population colonies at varying occasions like the yellow fever outbreaks, cholera and other “plagues” like rampant syphilis?

    The majority of the modern Bajan long-livers are from that population cohorts who were born when there was much improved and wider access to clean/potable water, unprocessed food and basic health care services and medicines like vaccines and antibiotics.

    Most of these longevity ‘mixtures and elixirs’ available to blacks came on the scene not during slavery but during the first half of the 20th century especially after the 1918 pandemic.


  8. Hal has propagated that purpose of opposition in politics is not to provide any constructive original creation in thought as it is plagiarised by incumbent power and their sole purpose when other side are out of power is to criticise the best they can using their unenlightened minds. Therefore his all his deeds and works on BU can be deemed to be in summary as feeding misinformation and disinformation as a daily occupation as an agent of psyops. He suggested that David is an agent of CIA, perhaps he is an agent of a Barbados CIA stealing all the good ideas on BU to steal the good brains and put them in his suitcase. Should we listen to Hal or David and is it a binary option. Internet is known for trolling so all the good ideas are in effect bad ideas multiplied. I wish I was deep instead of being so macho.


  9. @ Vincent Codrington
    “How is it possible to build a model by ignoring how we arrived at the current state. Surely if mistakes of a policy nature were made blame has to be attached to those responsible for those missteps. It is how economy and society evolve.We must constantly correct ,over correct and adjust. That is life. That is reality. BUT do not expect all concepts of reality to coincide.
    Barbados is not a political and economic island . Other countries are making decisions which will impact Barbados. Since we do not know these ,the planner can only make educated guesses. So relax. Encourage discussion; but avoid venting impatience.”
    The above is a perfect example of why we are constantly taking two steps forward and one step backward. It is the thinking that has permeated the country since independence. Proving we are developed; believing that when we bark the world stands still;products of an overrated educational system and an almost a pathetic lack of confidence in ourselves. It is not gradualism it is fear and a blindness to our own possibilities.. We prefer to constantly fix the old car rather than realise it can no longer do what it has formally done.
    I have seen people put more effort in dog and pigeon shows than we put into to building a new Barbados. No wonder Corbin can call we niggers and still wake up this morning knowing full well the nine day discussion is over.
    We can’t even connect the bloody dots.


  10. MillerFebruary 16, 2021 10:17 AM

    The majority of the modern Bajan long-livers are from that population cohorts who were born when there was much improved and wider access to clean/potable water, unprocessed food and basic health care services and medicines like vaccines and antibiotics.

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

    Any centenarian alive in Barbados today was born in 2021, decades before the advent of any of what you describe in the 1960’s.

    This is simple math!!

    The population cohorts to whom you refer were born in the 60’s.

    They are “young” and riddled with NCD’s.

    They are more likely to drop like flies long before they get up in the 80’s and 90’s like the Bajan long-livers today and in the days of slavery and the super centenarians.

    You see it in the rise in death rates since 1998.

    It is more than likely that we will see a fall in life expectancy as time goes on and women will be severely impacted as they are the ones who are largely obese and out of shape.

    The resident life expectancy expert can dispute if she likes but, facts are facts.

    How many obese centenerians have you seen?


  11. John thinks 30 minutes of exercising is life changing and will make him indestructible and immortal

    Reality is it should be 2-3 hours daily and takes a couple of years to see any real benefits.

    Oldies are declining with age and exercise will slow down and offset the decline a little.


  12. Those born in the 1920’s had 40 years to establish their eating habits before the 60’s came along.

    They ate according to what they could afford.

    Check this presentation .

    We are #8 in the world where Childhood Obesity is concerned.

    https://onecaribbeanhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Childhood-Obesity-Dr-T-Alafia-Samuels.pdf

    Get up offa wunna backsides!!


  13. You are not the only one. One character uses about seven different anonymous names.

    Austin, how come you not bothered about another character that does use about five different names?

    ac, Angela Cox, Angela Skeete, Coxable and Mariposa?


  14. Trying to confirm.

    “Barbados records its first death of a child from COVID-19.
    The child, believed to be about nine years old, died at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.
    Starcom Network News understands that the child succumbed to a condition brought on by the virus called Mis – C or multiple system inflammatory syndrome.
    The Ministry of Health is expected to issue a statement on the matter later this morning.”

    Share This:


  15. @ William

    You are right. Let us go back to the last 12 years. We are now in the third or fourth industrial revolution and I am yet to her of any dynamic business ideas to come out of Barbados.
    A friend of mine, a young man, went to Imperial College where he also did a post-graduate;; he came up with some ideas, was taken to Silicon Valley where he was funded for six months at the end of which he was offered seven million (pounds or dollars) to walk away from the project.
    He is now back in the UK working on other ideas. One former Dragon’s Den entrepreneur, whose mother came from St Phillip and who loves Barbados, operates about 200 yards from the high commission. I am sure if approached he will be willing to offer his skills and knowledge to the island.
    I can go and on about outstanding second and third generation Barbadians, one or two economists among them, who will gladly like to associate themselves with the island, but at present have never been approached.


  16. @ John February 16, 2021 10:31 AM
    “Any centenarian alive in Barbados today was born in 2021, decades before the advent of any of what you describe in the 1960’s.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Stop with the red-herrings.

    Were there more centenarians in Victorian Britain especially London that there are today in Little England?

    Were the fountains in Bridgetown- especially the one to represent the arrival of piped water from St. John erected in the 1960’s?

    Was the BWA network supply of water to the village standpipes and public baths to get rid of the body lice prevalent among the black populations of earlier centuries installed from the 1960’s?

    Did cholera, yellow fever and smallpox magically disappear at the end in the 1950’s to allow the baby boomers of 1960’s to dodge their deadly impact?

    You yourself confirmed that one-third of the Bajan population was wiped out by cholera in the1850’s with many cholera grounds still dotted around the island.

    How many centenarians were among that unfortunate lot?

    Why do you think the recently vandalized Fort George reservoir was built?

    How many locals and young British soldiers/sailors fell victim to the yellow fever and whose tombs can be seen in the churchyards close to the military outpost at the Garrison savannah?

    What do you think were the purposes for the isolation centre of the Lazaretto and the quarantine facility off the island of Pelican?

    But we do agree with you that island is facing a major problem of obesity leading to a congenital state of NCDs.

    The challenge is one of finding the solution in an environment where the political and society leaders and opinion shapers are themselves morbidly obese.


  17. Yep…confirmed…child passed away…keep the diseased tourists away from the island..


  18. @ Frank February 16, 2021 10:56 AM
    (Quote):
    Austin, how come you not bothered about another character that does use about five different names?
    ac, Angela Cox, Angela Skeete, Coxable and Mariposa? (Unquote).
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Frankly speaking, that’s like expecting a pathological liar to be the priest in the confessional box.


  19. What’s the expression.. who the dog likes, he licks.
    xx—xx
    One ignorant man’s opinion.
    I think PLT is beating around the solution for our problem. His work/visa is an approximation to what the solution should be.

    The way out may be to identify deficiencies in international businesses, place strong emphasis on coding, try to develop coding centers of excellence and then try to sell our services to these international businesses.

    We have to figure out how to redirect US/European IT traffic from Asia to our islands. This may be one area where we can move a large numbers of employees towards and quickly.


  20. “It’s because we see the economic hardship for people in this country and this time it’s worse because it’s less than 12 months since the last [lockdown] and we have high levels of unemployment, businesses on the brink of collapse and for many, this is likely to be the end of the road. There are people in this country that cannot eat unless they work and this is why that very delicate balance is almost impossible between trying to save somebody’s life and trying to feed them at the same time.”

    yall cultivated and maintained A SLAVE SOCIETY at Black people’s expense for greedy, low class minority people…this is the outcome and fallout…people should not be corraled and suppressed into a corner so that unless they work, they can’t eat….this is on all of you with the slave master and slave mentality…..glad yall getting exposed through ya own wicked actions of REFUSING TO ECONOMICALLY EMPOWER BLACK PEOPLE WITH THEIR OWN MONEY……the piper must be paid…parliament rats and sellouts.

    Karma is in town.


  21. John King – Fool’s Paradise


  22. @TheOGazerts

    Our challenge will always be exercising a high level of self discipline to compete with Asian workers. This is the competitive edge those countries hold over us. Do we have the capacity to pivot?


  23. “The way out may be to identify deficiencies in international businesses, place strong emphasis on coding, try to develop coding centers of excellence and then try to sell our services to these international businesses.”

    good luck with that…Ronald the joker Jones was given that advice 10 years ago, he dismissed it then and the island degraded even further since, they are now 25 years behind everyone else, by the time they figure it out and get off their tails…the newer business models for employment and entrepreneurship will be at least 15 years ahead…..they still live in the 18th century and refuse to remove anything not related to that time period…


  24. @ TheOGazerts,

    Can Barbados compete against a low wage country like India ?


  25. If a child has died in Barbados from a CoVid related disease, this will be evidence that the president has been economical with the truth all along. She cannot be trusted.
    If it is not true, then we owe her an apology. But the government should make this clear as a matter of urgency.


  26. MillerFebruary 16, 2021 11:44 AM

    Did cholera, yellow fever and smallpox magically disappear at the end in the 1950’s to allow the baby boomers of 1960’s to dodge their deadly impact?

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

    Cholera was unknown in Barbados in 1854.

    It is caused by a bacteria not a virus, and there is no vaccine, but rehydration treatment is usually successful.

    The US army only discovered mosquitoes were the cause of the spread of yellow fever in Cuba, Rough Riders and all that.

    I have been vaccinated twice in my life, once when I had to travel through Trinidad from the UK on Laker Airlines in 1974 and again when I went hiking in Guyana in 1996.

    I think it only lasts 10 years.

    Small pox vaccination I had when I was a child.

    Vaccination with serum from cows infected with Cow Pox was being done in the 1700’s.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowpox#:~:text=After%20inoculation%2C%20vaccination%20using%20the,smallpox%20disease%20much%20more%20efficiently.

    Three red herrings.


  27. India is the 6th biggest economy in the world; Canada is the 10th. Barbados is not in the top 50.


  28. Anyway, you will be pleased to hear the lady has laid down the law and sent me the registration email for 18 to 69 registration.

    A man’s got to do what a man’s got to do!!


  29. So why would a tiny island with a work force of less than 140,000 exclusive of civi servants want to compete with a country like ….India 2020 population is estimated at 1,380,004,385 BILION people at mid year…for outsourcing labor…..and Indians accept US$1 a day in some instances…they are not the only ones…

    when thinkers start understanding REALITY as opposed to what they’re accustomed to, then things will be different…until then….the island will go nowhere….the people better wake up fast..

    but there is hope…Black people in other jurisdictions are leading the way, but will everyone want to follow…some people are comfortable as slaves…more power to them i say.


  30. Hal Austin February 16, 2021 12:36 PM #: “If a child has died in Barbados from a CoVid related disease, this will be evidence that the president has been economical with the truth all along. She cannot be trusted.”

    How does a child dying from a condition brought on by COVID-19, be considered as evidence “that (prime minister) has been economical with the truth all along and cannot be trusted?”


  31. If a child has died in Barbados from a CoVid related disease, this will be evidence that the president has been economical with the truth all along. She cannot be trusted.
    If it is not true, then we owe her an apology. But the government should make this clear as a matter of urgency….(Quote)


  32. MillerFebruary 16, 2021 11:44 AM

    How many centenarians were among that unfortunate lot?

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

    I just happened to have downloaded the burial Register for 1854 for St. Peter during my researches.

    July, August September were the killer months for Cholera in St. Peter.

    About 1,000 people were recorded in the burial register for St. Peter’s Parish Church.

    Unfortunately, many entries do not have an age entered in this period.

    Before those 3 months, centenerians died at a rate of under 1 per month, 3 in the first six months.

    Since they were born in or prior to 1754, (1854 – 100 = 1754), most of their lives they spent during the period of slavery.

    Once they survived childhood, slaves and former slaves, in fact all Bajans could routinely live to a ripe old age in Barbados.

    This is an incontrovertible fact of history.

    Many of those who died of cholera in 1854 were buried opposite the St. Peter Cemetery, ie on the sea side.

    Incidentally, St. Peter’s Cemetery used to be the site of a Quaker Meeting Room and Burying Ground.

    It became the property of the Anglican Church in 1846 and is now known as St. Peter’s Cemetery.


  33. It’s a damn good thing Barbados has no resources.

    “Bankrupted by Socialism, Venezuela Cedes Control of Companies
    By Fabiola Zerpa and Nicolle Yapur
    February 12, 2021, 8:00 AM GMT-4
    As nation starves, investors join with public food companies
    New managers expected to hand over part of production, profits

    Saddled with hundreds of failed state companies in an economy barreling over a cliff, the Venezuelan government is abandoning socialist doctrine by offloading key enterprises to private investors, offering profit in exchange for a share of revenue or products.

    Dozens of chemical plants, coffee processors, grain silos and hotels confiscated over the past two decades have been transferred — but not sold — to private operators in so-called strategic alliances, nine people with knowledge of the matter said. Managers cover payroll and investments, and deliver products and a percentage of their income to the government.”


  34. Going to make one last attempt.

    Not a problem that we can solve in a few minutes. We do not have to go head to head against the giants if we need to find a niche an area that we can exploit.

    As an example, IBM was a giant in computing before microsoft and apple came along with laptops.

    We have Amazon and Facebook new companies, that employ thousands of people.

    We saw local folks trying to make a foray into the digital coin industry.
    Number of people it could employ is limited, but somewhere in this new technological space are areas that we can exploit.

    Brainstorming needed.


  35. Here comes John promising to increase your life expectancy by reintroducing slavery.


  36. Did you know that the oldest slave on record was 114 in 1817 and that there were several slaves who centenerians and super centenerians in the 1817 census?

    There is a record of a burial at Westbury of a woman after 1878 who was 120 years old.
    The oldest person I have come across was in the early 1800’s.

    Elizabeth Philips was buried at the age of 126.

    +++++++++++++++++++++
    @ John
    These numbers have little scientific merit. They are probably due to age exaggeration and/or recording error. It is highly unlikely that there were any super centenarians at that time and nigh impossible that Elizabeth Philips died at 126.

    But I am still intrigued. Where did you get this data?


  37. Dullard…there was a lady in Dominca died older than that in the days when they still hid these things and promoted their lies…but longevity has everything to do with GENETICS …taking care of the body, drinking lots of water etc, and nothing else.

    there are always clusters of people who live way over a hundred years old, they can be found everywhere, many in Japan, Barbados, etc…there is info on those in Africa that no one hears about…as long as you’re blessed with those genes, they go on for decades and decades.


  38. “We saw local folks trying to make a foray into the digital coin industry.
    Number of people it could employ is limited, but somewhere in this new technological space are areas that we can exploit.

    Brainstorming needed.”

    the ones making a foray into digital coin were running their usual scam.

    there is room for many in tech as it evolves, it’s a personal choice if you can get 10,000 students gravitating to technology as an option, that’s a start… it’s a huge arena with billions to go around….a total win win…..

    Have relatives who spent the last decade growing in leaps and bounds…money well spent on education in the tech world.

    that’s my contribution, can’t share anymore, i have been pushing that agenda for many years….everyone must now do their own research…or not.


  39. @ TheOGazerts who wrote”Brainstorming needed.”

    I am willing but my brain is too old and damaged from overwork.

    A couple months ago a former employer offered me a ” project ” to work on and I declined even though
    he was not concerned about my old age and diminished competence. lol

    You could brainstorm with PLT who still seems to have a brilliant mind.


  40. black John is relaying messages on BU…but the ones sending the messages are MORE likely to be the SLAVES OF THE FUTURE…the only way Blacks in Barbados, the Caribbean, the Americas etc will ever be slaves again is if THEY REALLY WANT TO and of course ya will find the softheaded yardfowls and others who fall into that category..


  41. Re: Barbados extends lockdown.
    Hypocrisy on steroids!
    When the whole world banned flights from the UK we were told that we could not afford to ban flights from the UK cuz it would ruin the economy.
    Dont mind me. I live in Barbados.
    I aint one of the pedigreed / bougie/ sloths.


  42. “we were told that we could not afford to ban flights from the UK cuz it would ruin the economy.”

    well now we know that was a lie to accommodate greedy thieves and racists…but the truth came out in the wash….😂😂🤣 and every dime made during that stupid move has to be spent on infections..if this doesn’t tell Mia that she has to stop listening to the bottomfeeders in the social parasiteship..nothing will.

    there was no valid reason to keep the island open to infected tourists…closing then…would have saved people from this now.


  43. @ John February 16, 2021 12:39 PM
    “Cholera was unknown in Barbados in 1854.
    It is caused by a bacteria not a virus, and there is no vaccine, but rehydration treatment is usually successful.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Sir Johnny, every first year student in biology knows that cholera is caused by a water-borne bacterium and not a virus like Covid.

    What you should be asking is who would have introduced the cholera to Barbados.

    You certainly cannot blame the black slaves from West Africa since the Quakers had put an end to the trade since 1806.

    But here a clue to your treasure hunt of blame.

    Why not look to the whore houses on Fairchild Street and its environs in Bridgetown then patronized by the ‘visiting’ English sailors and soldiers who would have contracted the cholera bacterium during the Broad Street outbreak in the Soho district of London?

    Like the Covid-19 and 20, the visitors from Britain brought the ‘disease with them to little England and spread it like wild fire among the vulnerable natives just like what Columbus and his marauding gang did to the poor so-called Arawaks and Caribs.

    Neither do we readily internalize the European Christianized tall-tales of bullshit stories about the Cortés and Pizarro conquests of the Aztec and Inca empires by means of a few hungry sickly disease-ridden Europeans armed with a few muskets and hungry sickly horses or even the European concocted fable of Montezuma’s revenge.

    It was the numerous ‘foreign’ diseases transported by the European to the Caribbean and the Americas which decimated the indigenous populations and thereby facilitated the acquisition of the lands and the need for the importation of the more robust African slaves.


  44. @ Miller,
    I believe we were asked to keep our borders open in the knowledge that it would lead to the premature death of an obscene number of our majority population.

    We have now reached the point in the cycle of this pandemic where the local population will succumb to covid-19.. Bear in mind, we do not have an infrastructure which will have the capacity to cope with the sick and dying.

    Do not whisper it too loudly – there are prominent individuals and groups on the island; and influential groups of external players who would welcome a vastly reduced local population (black majority). We know that that their is a tremendous pressure on our government to make Barbados a hub for migration.

    I have just read in Barbados Today that Barbados Muslim minority population is offering food parcel to the local population.


  45. Look wunna a Press conference at 6.15 pm


  46. “there are prominent individuals and groups on the island; and influential groups of external players who would welcome a vastly reduced local population (black majority).”

    been warning them for years…let’s hope all the yardfowls who cussed me for saying that…..ALL GO FIRST…😂


  47. “@ Miller,
    I believe we were asked to keep our borders open in the knowledge that it would lead to the premature death of an obscene number of our majority population.”

    that’s exactly how it looks now.


  48. Listen I would like to tell this goverment that 6.15 pm is not 6.30 or 7 pm. Either stick to the blasted time or cancel the conference.


  49. MillerFebruary 16, 2021 5:25 PM

    @ John February 16, 2021 12:39 PM
    “Cholera was unknown in Barbados in 1854.
    It is caused by a bacteria not a virus, and there is no vaccine, but rehydration treatment is usually successful.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Sir Johnny, every first year student in biology knows that cholera is caused by a water-borne bacterium and not a virus like Covid.

    What you should be asking is who would have introduced the cholera to Barbados.

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

    Obviously you never went to Cave Hill or did biology at University!!

    Asiatic cholera was introduced into England in 1831.

    It finally reached Barbados in 1854.

    Everybody, whether they went to University or not, knows it was Yellow Fever that was introduced into Barbados from Africa, not Cholera.

    A particularly bad strain got to St. Domingue in the 1790’s also from Africa.

    From there it spread with French colonists fleeing St. Domingue with their slaves to New Orleans.

    “Epidemics have been pivotal in the history of the world as exemplified by a yellow fever epidemic in the Caribbean that clearly altered New World geopolitics. By the end of the 18th century, yellow fever–then an “emerging disease”–was widespread throughout the Caribbean and particularly lethal in Saint-Domingue (present day Haiti). From 1793 to 1798, case fatality rates among British troops in the West Indies (including Saint-Domingue) were as high as 70%. A worse fate befell newly arrived French armed forces in 1802, ostensibly sent by Napoleon to suppress a rebellion and to reestablish slavery. Historians have disagreed on why Napoleon initially dispatched nearly 30,000 soldiers and sailors to the island. Evidence suggests the troops were actually an expeditionary force with intensions to invade North America through New Orleans and to establish a major holding in the Mississippi valley. However, lacking knowledge of basic prevention and control measures, mortality from the disease left only a small and shattered fraction of his troops alive, thwarting his secret ambition to colonize and hold French-held lands, which later became better known as the Louisiana Purchase. If an event of the magnitude of France’s experience were to occur in the 21st century, it might also have profound unanticipated consequences.”


  50. “Asiatic cholera reached Britain for the first time in late 1831, with the main epidemic occurring during 1832. The disease caused profuse diarrhea, severe dehydration, collapse, and often death. There was widespread public fear, and the political and medical response to this new disease was variable and inadequate. In the summer of 1832, a series of “cholera riots” occurred in various towns and cities throughout Britain, frequently directed against the authorities, doctors, or both. The city of Liverpool, in the northwest of England, experienced more riots than elsewhere. Between 29 May and 10 June 1832, eight major street riots occurred, with several other minor disturbances. The object of the crowd’s anger was the local medical fraternity. The public perception was that cholera victims were being removed to the hospital to be killed by doctors in order to use them for anatomical dissection. “Bring out the Burkers” was one cry of the Liverpool mobs, referring to the Burke and Hare scandal four years earlier, when two men had murdered people in Edinburgh in order to sell their bodies for dissection to the local anatomy school. This issue was of special concern to the Liverpool citizenry because in 1826, thirty-three bodies had been discovered on the Liverpool docks, about to be shipped to Scotland for dissection. Two years later a local surgeon, William Gill, was tried and found guilty of running an extensive local grave-robbing system to supply corpses for his dissection rooms. The widespread cholera rioting in Liverpool was thus as much related to local anatomical issues as it was to the national epidemic. The riots ended relatively abruptly, largely in response to an appeal by the Roman Catholic clergy read from church pulpits, and also published in the local press. In addition, a respected local doctor, James Collins, published a passionate appeal for calm. The Liverpool Cholera Riots of 1832 demonstrate the complex social responses to epidemic disease, as well as the fragile interface between the public and the medical profession.”

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