Submitted by Grenville Phillips II

We have been asked how we would have responded to COVID-19.  We provided our best advice about one year ago, but the Government rejected it at that time.  Given the foreseen nightmare scenario, they should reconsider – for all our sakes.

In the past 15 days, we had 15 new deaths.  In the previous 15 days, we had 7.  In the previous 15, we had none, as shown in the attached graph.  This wave of deaths appears to have started after the UK variant arrived in Barbados.

On 3 March 2021, we can expect a total of 44 deaths if the growth rate is linear, or 59 if it is exponential.  If the growth is exponential, as the data suggests, then we can expect a total of over 100 deaths by 18 March 2021.  The assumed growth rate may be verified on 3 March 2021.

GOOD MANAGEMENT.

The only way to avoid the nightmare exponential growth scenario, is to manage all aspects of the COVID-19 response well.  We cannot risk using our home-grown management methods to manage this pandemic anymore.  Those methods have consistently failed us over the past 50 years.

When our management systems failed, the normal consequences were being forced to pay higher taxes, to wait longer for declining standards of service.  There were blips of improvement, but that only lasted until the quality employee was seen as a threat, and was made redundant.

Bad management only appears to work if there are few customers and products.  Once the number of customers and products increases, the system normally fails.  When it fails, the only thing left is public relations to give sorry excuses.  If the public relations is effective, the customers will blame themselves.

GOOD ADVICE.

It seems that we must comply with the WHO and PAHO requirements to receive their assistance.  Therefore, we must keep our borders open.  However, we should mandate that all visitors to Barbados must be properly quarantined at authorised facilities, for 14 days – no exceptions.

We should manage the: air and sea ports, transportation to quarantine facilities, quarantine facilities, QEH and other health clinics, isolation facility at Harrison point, contact tracing, and the Best Dos Santos lab, to ISO 9001 principles.  Even at this late stage, all of that can still be accomplished within 2 weeks.

REJECTING AN INTERNATIONAL STANDARD.

For some strange reason, the Government rejected the international management standard when I first recommended it about 17 years ago.  I since repeatedly offered to implement it in all statutory corporations in Barbados, free of cost.  But no takers.

About 3 years ago, all statutory corporation CEOs were invited to a free public workshop on implementing the standard.  They were guaranteed that following the training, they would be capable of implementing the ISO 9001 principles the following day.  Not a single CEO attended.  The Government has since publicly trashed the international standard – for political reasons.

NOT HAPPENING.

Based on my 17 years of active efforts, I do not expect the Government to consider the desperately needed international management standard at this time.  Especially since it is designed to delight customers with exceptional service, and eliminate corruption.  We simply cannot reject our 50-year cultural traditions so easily.  That is not who we are.

The weakness of our management system is evident, with over 30 unnecessary deaths.  Yet, we persist with it, and continue to reject the obvious solution.  Instead of surrendering our pride, retreating from what is not working, and embracing what will, we are encouraged to stay the course – to foreseen destruction.

LETTER FROM THE FUTURE.

I expect the Government will finally see the light in May 2021.  That is when the total forecasted deaths from exponential growth exceed 1,000, and we should get a scathing rebuke from the WHO for our politically motivated stubbornness.

At that time, we would wish that we could go back in time to this point, and change-course to avoid the foreseen and likely nightmare.  Well, think of this as a letter from the future, encouraging us to do just that.

Grenville Phillips II is a Chartered Structural Engineer. He can be reached at NextParty246@gmail.com

168 responses to “Difficult Conversations – What Would We Do?”


  1. Ah notice the Fowl Slaves won’t come out so i can brief them on the St. Lucy Project…that i know they knew nothing about.


  2. GP… comprenez vous….the extraordinary skills we have did not come from any slave master name, it came from our enslaved African ancestors…did not need a slave master or their name to have those…as John believes.

    however…those of us who know certain things, know we also inherited some special qualities from our slavemaster bloodlines besides tiefing, raping, murdering, enslaving, invading etc……but everyone will have to figure them out on their own…cause not everyone will have the same passed down gifts.


  3. Will this compensation plan cover the Caribbean ….where any injury because of the vaccine the injured should be PAID DIRECTLY to those impacted and not to corrupt governments. ..those touting the vaccine have no clue what people with serious allergies go through. I can eat shrimp, but only if it’s curried, any other preparation results in me breaking out in hives…and that’s the less serious effects, some foods can’t pass my mouth……there are horror stories to share about man-made medications etc….so for those pushing vaccines on everyone….it’s not that easy and can get very complicated.

    “London – The World Health Organisation has agreed to a no-fault compensation plan for claims of serious side effects in people in 92 poorer countries due to get coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines via the COVAX sharing scheme, resolving a big concern among recipient governments.

    The programme, which the WHO said was the first and only vaccine injury compensation mechanism operating on an international scale, will offer eligible people “a fast, fair, robust and transparent process”, the WHO said in a statement.

    “By providing a no-fault lump-sum compensation in full and final settlement of any claims, the COVAX programme aims to significantly reduce the need for recourse to the law courts, a potentially lengthy and costly process,” the statement said.

    Questions of how compensation claims would be handled in the event of any serious COVID-19 vaccine side effects, which are likely to be very rare, had been a worry for countries due to get COVID-19 shots via the COVAX plan.

    Countries funding their own COVID-19 vaccine procurement also plan their own liability programmes.

    The WHO-agreed plan, which has been under discussion for several months, is designed to cover serious side effects linked to any COVAX-distributed vaccines until June 30, 2022, to COVAX’s Advance Market Commitment-eligible economies – a group of 92 poorer states which includes most African and Southeast Asian countries.

    The programme will be financed initially from donor funding to the AMC as an extra charge on all doses of COVID-19 vaccines distributed through COVAX. Applications can be made via a portal at http://www.covaxclaims.com from March 31, 2021, the WHO said.

    Seth Berkley, chief executive of the GAVI vaccine alliance which co-leads COVAX, said the agreement on the compensation fund was “a massive boost” for COVAX, which aims to secure equitable global access to COVID-19 vaccines.

    “It helps those in countries who might have such effects, manufacturers to roll out vaccines to countries faster, and is a key benefit for lower-income governments procuring vaccines through (COVAX),” Berkley said.

    The WHO said it was also working with the insurance firm Chubb to secure insurance coverage for the programme. (Reuters).”


  4. Then they’ll look at you with a straight face and tell you how great and professional they are…..disgraceful jokers.

    “Barbados Hall of Shame·
    So probably thousands of people have a similar story. Tried many times to make an appointment for my mother’s vaccination. after over a week and many phone calls trying to find out what to do, I go physically on a recommendation to try to make an appointment at the polyclinic because nobody answers the phone. After several displays of incompetence by the staff, an appointment is made. The appointment is 830 this morning. My mother got there about 8am. Just got home at 1pm. This was to facilitate the front line workers moving to the front of the line. The old people were left in the sun with nothing to drink, nowhere to sit, no snack, no explanation, no apology. Nothing. MOH is just a big failure. The standards for employment in the ministry are way too low.”


  5. We’ve heard about this all year long in 2020, it won’t be different in Barbados or anywhere else, the risk is very real, multiple children have lost limbs and those are the lucky ones.

    “Posted: Feb 22, 2021 / 10:18 PM CST / Updated: Feb 22, 2021 / 10:18 PM CST

    GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) — On Monday morning, 10-year-old Michigan boy Dae-Shun Jamison had both of his hands and his left leg amputated after developing a rare, serious condition that affects children and has been linked to the coronavirus.

    Earlier in February, he had his right leg amputated after suffering from Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children.

    “They told me that he had MIS-C and I didn’t understand what it was. I’ve never heard of this, didn’t have a clue about it,” Dae-Shun’s mother Brittney Autman said.

    That’s because MIS-C is so rare. In Michigan to date, there have been fewer than 80 cases reported. Among the patients was Rockford High School football player Mack Bowman, who battled it last fall and survived.

    Fewer than five children in Michigan have died of MIS-C. One of them was Grand Rapids 14-year-old Honestie Hodges, whose detention inspired a change the Grand Rapids Police Department’s youth policy. She succumbed to the disease in November.

    As of Monday evening, there have been 2060 cases and 30 deaths across the country from MIS-C in children since mid-May 2020, according to the CDC. Other potential cases are under investigation.

    “We see it happen in children that are otherwise healthy, so it does make it very challenging,” Dr. Rosemary Olivero, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital, said.

    Pediatric doctors everywhere are trying to figure out more about MIS-C. Because COVID-19 is new, MIS-C is, too. Doctors still have a lot of questions about how it works.

    “The general way it’s going to go (is) you have the (coronavirus) infection, mild or not, you recover and then you develop this new illness that looks very different from an acute respiratory COVID,” Olivero said.

    Autman and Dae-Shun’s whole family contracted coronavirus a few months ago. Dae-Shun was asymptomatic, but his mom noticed about two weeks later that he wasn’t OK.

    “I noticed he started laying around. He said he had a headache and then the day before I took him in, the day I took him in, he had a high fever,” Autman said.

    Dae-Shun’s GoFundMe page tells the story of the weeks that followed. In December, procedures aimed at saving his limbs. In early January, blood loss as doctors tried to get a handle on the infection. On Jan. 15, the amputation of his right leg. Then, last week, word that both hands and his left leg would be amputated.

    “The rule of thumb that we all keep going back to is that children are fine, children are fine and indeed children still have a much lower risk of having severe, acute respiratory COVID-19. That is still the case,” Olivero said. “However, MIS-C shows us one of the many rare, strange manifestations that coronavirus can cause that can make an individual very ill.”

    Doctors warn parents to look for signs of MIS-C after their kids test positive for the virus: fever, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, neck pain, rash, bloodshot eyes and fatigue.

    As the search for answers continues, the journey to helping Dae-Shun adjust to his new life is just beginning.

    “I’m trying to find ways to get him back to the way he was as much as possible,” his mom said.

    After recovering from Monday’s surgery, there will be more rehab, similar to the work Dae-Shun has already been doing at Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital in Grand Rapids.

    Dae-Shun Jamison undergoes rehabilitation therapy. (Courtesy Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital)Read More »
    Dae-Shun Jamison undergoes rehabilitation therapy. (Courtesy Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital)Read More »
    Autman hopes her son’s next steps will be on prosthetics.

    “That’s my goal for him. That’s what I want for him,” she said.

    No matter how those steps are taken, Autman said she will be with her son all the way.

    “Every single day. As long as he’s here, I’m here,” Autman said”


  6. The world knows there have never been Black human rights in slave society Barbados.

    They brought in diseased tourists and let them loose on the island, they wandered all over the place and infected the island. Intimidated hotel workers to not wear masks with their racist selves then when they caused community spread the sellout government furst denied it, then blamed the Black population instead of their greedy do nothing selves. No secret the island lack human rights in all aspects and in ALL AREAS for the majority Black population.

    https://www.facebook.com/100004881422697/posts/1740203022819062/?sfnsn=scwspwa


  7. If black people invented mathematics, plse give us a brief history.


  8. WURA-War-on-U February 22, 2021 10:13 AM #: “black John, shut ya dumb ass…HE GOT HIS GENIUS FROM HIS AFRICAN ANCESTORS WHO CREATED MATHEMATICS….clown.”

    Please provide the forum with your sources of information that indicate mathematics ORIGINATED in Africa.


  9. fcuk off artax you incredibly ignorant ass, go do your own research and stop asking me shit, i warned you about that already…the mentally enslaved don’t know anything about Africa and am not the one to enlighten you.


  10. “fcuk off artax you incredibly ignorant ass, go do your own research and stop asking me shit, i warned you about that already…the mentally enslaved don’t know anything about Africa and am not the one to enlighten you.”

    Hahahahahaha

    You are WRONG that “AFRICAN ANCESTORS CREATED MATHEMATICS.”

    So, the “incredibly ignorant ass” here is YOU.

    “Go do some real research and stop talking shit.”


  11. On dear me! I think “invented” is the wrong word as some forimm of mathematical observations and practices must have existed from thebeginning of time. I would call it “developed the field into am academic discipline”. I thought that was recognised to have been the pursuit of the Middle East. I think the Iranians are credited with that. Or the Arabs. I will have to check. Unfortunately, I can lay no claim to knowing it all. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣


  12. Correction – “form”


  13. @ Donna February 26, 2021 9:56 AM
    “Ithought that was recognised to have been the pursuit of the Middle East. I think the Iranians are credited with that. Or the Arabs. I will have to check. Unfortunately, I can lay no claim to knowing it all.”
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    To be closer to the ‘truth’ of its origins, it was the then Sumerians- the ‘documented’ early civilization which emerged on the fertile crescent of Mesopotamia including modern day Iraq- from which the Judeo-Christian stories of Creation, the Garden of Eden and the flood originated.

    Mathematics may have had its ‘prehistoric’ genesis (along with astronomy) in its most rudimentary form among the hunter-gatherer nomads of the Sub-Saharan and central African fertile plains.


  14. Miller,

    So…. we can agree it did not start with the pale skins. That is what is important, really.


  15. Oh dear! Just heard an American describe Texas as rapidly approaching a ” failed state”.

    People with electricity bills of $10,000. All legally billed by the Electricity Co.

    Murdaaaah!


  16. Miller,

    If all life started in Africa, some mathematical observations would obviously have started there in some primative form. And scientific observations too.

    One simply cannot exist without making these observations and acting accordingly.

    But the writing down of it in a formal way and the development of it as a discipline would have come much later.


  17. @ Donna February 26, 2021 10:59 AM
    “One simply cannot exist without making these observations and acting accordingly.

    But the writing down of it in a formal way and the development of it as a discipline would have come much later.”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    You are quite right in your observation.

    Oral cultural tradition does have its limitations in the chronological sense of things (and which is reflected by the paucity of ‘written-down’ evidence of the contributions by sub-Saharan cultures to human advancement.

    Hence my use of the ‘adjective’ “DOCUMENTED” to describe the Sumerian (written down in cuneiform) contribution(s) to the development of mathematics- in addition to astronomy/astrology, religion, agriculture etc- as tool(s) for humans to understand their role and relationship with Mother Earth and her celestial neighbours especially her closest one, Selene the moon.

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