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What is the DLP doing with its bevy of lawyers who are members?
What is the DLP doing with its army of lawyers in the ranks?

David Blogmaster

I might pose in a similar rhetorical manner, “What are the GoB lawyers doing re the ICBL affair”?
While the actionable answer is nothing, they are all vested members of the Club. It is against Club rules to bring any such action, though speaking out is permitted once an election has been called. The Senator, given his refusal to enter the electable fray, is not a full member. He has visitor privilege. It is understood any form of negative or challenging objection is good for the Club, it gives non-members the distinct impression there are opposing forces within the Club.

BU Commenter – NorthernObserver

The two questions posted by the blogmaster to Prime Minister, Caswell is no Lawyer but … submission were in response to a commenter who lauded Senator Caswell Franklyn for taking the government to court by challenging the legality of the Emergency Management (Amendment) Act 2020. NorthernObserver (another commenter) chimed in to remind readers there is a way business is done by the Club in Barbados sometimes referred to as the political class.

The blogmaster extends best wishes to Senator Caswell Franklyn who has been the most strident dissenting voice in Barbados in recent years. It shows what is possible if the objective of citizens is to unswervingly and selflessly serve the public. What cannot be refuted: Senator Franklyn has single-handedly eclipsed the meek voices of traditional political parties including the Democratic Labour Party (DLP). The irony, he has expressed no interest in formally presenting himself to the Lower House.

In a post-2018 general election period a relevant dissenting voice is critical to safeguard the interest of the people in the type of democracy practiced. Long before the Mia Mottley led Barbados Labour Party won the 2018 general election 30 zip, there was heightened concern expressed in this space and elsewhere the suffocating influence the Club; duopoly, political class has been exerting on the social and economic landscape of Barbados. We need more citizens of Caswell’s ilk to commit to public service. For our democracy to be fit for purpose this blogmaster posits it the inherent responsibility of enlightened citizens to fully participate.

It has not gone unnoticed former minister in the last Cabinet Michael Lashley has busied himself with earning fees challenging the legitimacy of the Minister of Health under the Emergency Management Act being named as the informant in charges brought by the Covid Unit. This is also laudable but with a caveat. A big contributor to the sloth and inefficiency how justice is dispensed and business facilitation is organized in Barbados can be tracked to the legal profession. The legal profession given its heavy involvement in the administration of government and wider society must be forced to reinvent itself in the interest of the people and country.

Some will regard Senator Franklyn’s legal challenge as nettlesome. Some will say it is necessary to ensure process to support the model of democracy practised is respected and protected.

Democracy’s a very fragile thing. You have to take care of democracy. As soon as you stop being responsible to it and allow it to turn into scare tactics, it’s no longer democracy, is it? It’s something else. It may be an inch away from totalitarianism.

Sam Shepherd


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102 responses to “Senator Caswell Franklyn NOT a Member of ‘The Club’”


  1. This blog will be closed as well if the nothingness continues.


  2. Franklyn brings lawsuit against Government
    https://www.barbadosadvocate.com/sites/barbadosadvocate.com/files/styles/large/public/field/image/WEB-Caswell%20leaving%20court.jpg
    Opposition Senator Caswell Franklyn has brought a lawsuit, filed with a Certificate of Urgency, against Government’s Covid-19 directives.

    Speaking to The Barbados Advocate yesterday afternoon after leaving the Supreme Court Complex, accompanied by attorneys-at-law Shamar Bovell and Neil A. Marshall, he remained adamant that the directives are non-binding as they have not first gained the approval of Parliament.

    “We also filed a Certificate of Urgency, asking the court to treat this as an urgent matter so we can hear it quickly, because this matter is too important to be strung our through the legal system going on for years and years like what happens with the others. The Prime Minister cannot come and make laws and people are getting imprisoned and the matter is still up in the air. The matter has to be settled,” he stated.

    The current Emergency Management (COVID-19) (Curfew) (No.4) directive, outlines that a fine of $50 000 or one year imprisonment, or both, may be imposed on anyone failing to comply with the terms and conditions of the curfew.

    “Even if a state gives you the power as a minister to make regulations, those must come before Parliament. In this case, the Prime Minister must bring these emergency regulations within seven days, and so far since March last year this has not happened. As far as I am concerned, people have gone to jail and people are being punished for laws that cannot be properly on the books,” Franklyn argued.

    Stressing he is not against government’s moves to reduce the spread of the virus in the island, the veteran trade unionist nevertheless contended the correct steps have to be taken. (JMB)

    Source: Barbados Advocate


  3. Hal i could sense very clearly that the BU engineers of malicious tidbits were awaiting a response that would have dragged us into a verbal fight
    They are some here who have a gladiator mentality and would have gladly like to see a parting of the wsys between us
    They were wrong and indeed i get to have the last word as David said i should have
    Licking my chops and laughing at BU instigators of determining in their loosely fitted brain what is right or what is wrong


  4. Btw it serms as if a class action suit would be pelted in the rear end of govt as more business owners attached themselves to the one ongoing lawsuit
    Mia is a lawyer or what?
    It seems as if her LEC has served her no formal purpose on those things legals
    But then again privilege counts lol


  5. “Wuhloss muh belly…..The name Hal brings out the best in idiots.”


  6. @ Angela

    Their behaviour is predictable. They could not change in a month of Sundays. Note how there is no discussion on Caswell’s challenge to the emergency legislation; note how there is no discussion on the post-CoVid impact on the economy and wider society; note how there is no discussion on Ronnie Yearwood’s Barrow lecture.
    The problem is that ideas are a bigger challenge, ranting, swearing and aggressive, confrontational street fighting is more their style. Note even the language they use.
    Recently someone referred to me as ‘hating’ something. Now ‘hate’ is a word I have not used in years, unless quoting or referencing something or someone. More important, it is not a regular part of British conversation.
    In particular, there are hate crimes in the UK. So to hate someone is a prima facie offence.


  7. Some contributions and contributors on BU eh. A lotta one-track, outdated, unrealistic, anecdotal evidence-based ideas to transform Bdos ovrrnight are promulgated by the hour. Just form a party and run.🤭🤭


  8. The Senators excersise of taking the government to court is destined for FAILURE. I agree with his rational, however in a MAGABE UNDISCIPLINED STATE the judicial system is but another arm of the government to administer their doctrine. Shall I give a couple examples Venezuela, Chilie……..


  9. Hal expecting those issues to be fully ventilated on BU is like looking for a needke in a hay stack
    BU is the official website for all things positive towards the govt
    Anything else offered would not see the light of day enough to generate meaningful response
    The measuring stick usefulness now resorts itself to attacks on those who dare crticize govt policies
    I listened to Ronnie Yearwood lecture his comments were well laid out and forward thinking
    A person who has a lot to offer his country in ways which can move the political needle forward in a positive manner
    However my thinking is that the movers and shakers of barbados would move the hell and sky before Ronnie would be given any measure of appreciation


  10. What is NOT destined for FAILURE is what black SELLOUTS and RACISTS CAN’T CONTROL…


  11. “However my thinking is that the movers and shakers of barbados would move the hell and sky before Ronnie would be given any measure of appreciation.”

    Yet he was a candidate for the BLP St.James South nomination and loss 47-81. Then again the current DLP leader got 5 out of 100 votes but still “won” the nomination. I could only laugh at people who behave like Ronnie just land. The ideas he laid out in his lecture were not new either, but some of us have a tendency to only see and hear what we want.


  12. @enuff

    The flipside is that there is no shortage of ideas, white and green papers etc to move Barbados forward. What continues to be the hurdle?

    Execution and implementation deficit.

    Lack of ease of doing business.

    Have you noticed with 3 ministers overseeing the licensing authority and BRA, they are unable to issue people with stickers covid 19 notwithstanding?

    Why shut down that department 100%. Let them work shift!


  13. Taking some control, David! Good! The blog is becoming unbearable! Outright provable lies, hypocrisy and trolling. LITERALLY AD NAUSEUM!

    Sickening!

    Already I feel the need for some uplifting music.


  14. The emotion of hatred is not a crime in any jurisdiction. Hate crimes are ACTIONS.


  15. David
    I am just an observer, au contraire to what the nuisances polluting the blog daily with nonsense and plain lies claim, but there’s change happening in relation to the ease of doing business. We all wish it was at a faster pace but considering we’ve been basically shut for a year, it is a bit harsh to come down hard on stickers etc. New processes need time to work out the kinks, whether in a “failed state” or one of the utopian metropoles (if you take the BU rabble seriously). The national ID card may very well be the lynchpin in the government’s move to digitisation and digitisation. Yet, the same folks calling for new ideas are in the press engaging in sophistry about an optional fingerprint-capable ID card.


  16. Snuff

    Yet he was a candidate for the BLP St.James South nomination and loss 47-81.

    xxxxxxxc
    Are u attaching my words to blp having movers and shakers within the party
    Well if so they can do as they dam please such as to provide when it dam well fits there purposes
    Which bodes well to my earlier comment in reference to Ronnie losing his seat
    His presence within the blp might have done more to upset the apple cart which the movers and shakers would not have liked
    Go figure


  17. @Enuff

    Let us accept Covid 19 is having a destabilizing impact never imagined. There is no excuse for there to be a crystal clear communication/PR targeting the public to set expectations.


  18. RE Let us accept Covid 19 is having a destabilizing impact never imagined
    WHY? IS IT NOT TO BE EXPEXTED THUS? IS IT NOT EXPECTED THAT THE BIRTHPANG SIGNS PREDICTED IN THE OLIVET DISCOURSE IN MATHEW 24:4-7 SHOULD COME TO PASS AND GET WORSE
    NOW STEUPSE AND SCOFF AND MOCK BUT SINCE 1981 WITH AIDS AND 202O WITH COVID HOW MANY PLAGUES HAVE THERE BEEN.. AND HAS THERE NOT BEEN AN INCREASE IN GLOBAL WARNING, MOST LIKELY DUE TO AN INCREASING AN INCREASING EARTHQUAKES AND ACTIVITY IN THE WORLDS VARIOUS FUMAROLES.

    LET ME STEUPSE FOR YOU …….BEFORE THE PILE ON STARTS


  19. Caswell is doing a good job. Somebody needs to keep the government in check. Whether he wins or not the signal has been sent that somebody is watching.

    Another troubling thing I recently heard. The police and the COVID monitors are stopping people at random, outside of curfew hours and asking them where they are going. I think this is an over-reach and if it happens to me I will tell them to follow me and see. I cannot accept that level of intrusion into my business. My position is that if you catch me breaking the law you can deal with me but you cannot suspect me for no reason. So if I am on my way to the hairdresser that is my business. When I get there it is their business. Until Monday, that is. I understand that it had a whole lotta people frightened.

    That is not good.


  20. David
    Crystal clear in the midst of uncertainty? Show me this crystal clear strategy anywhere in the world. I read recently that the UK Chancellor initially earmarked £30b to protect the economy from covid, total spend is now north of £400b. The Estimates start next week and will be on CBC, youtube, facebook etc. How many gine tune in? Instead you’ll hear the bill is being hidden, as if the Bill and the fat estimates book weren’t two docs for aaages. No surprise the Senator feels embolden to file court papers while the gallery cheers; because not having to go Parliament for permission everytime there is a need to take urgent action on covid is dictatorial, not plain common sense and efficient. There’s an interesting article in today’s BT about constitutional rights and protection of public health. What is the intent of the Emergency Management (Amendment) Act, 2020?🤭


  21. @enuff

    The reference to crystal clear was the lack of communication.


  22. Lack of what? Do explain.


  23. @ Enuff March 13, 2021 2:25 PM
    “ No surprise the Senator feels embolden to file court papers while the gallery cheers; because not having to go Parliament for permission everytime there is a need to take urgent action on covid is dictatorial, not plain common sense and efficient. There’s an interesting article in today’s BT about constitutional rights and protection of public health. What is the intent of the Emergency Management (Amendment) Act, 2020?”
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    You went down this ‘anti-Caswell’ road only to find yourself in a cul-de-sac of blind ignorance and legal stupidity regarding the lawful vs. unlawful action of appointing an additional DCoP without the necessary Parliamentary due process.

    In the final analysis, even the AG left you hanging high and dry to wallow in your dung pile of stupidity and shame.

    Instead of the Law, please don’t make yourself look like a right royal red jackass, again!


  24. @enuff

    You have missed public comment on the radio, social and traditional media and elsewhere about what is the status of driving without up to date stickers? Has the police issued a statement about what is expected given the COVID-19 challenge?

    #etc


  25. Caswell can take his matter to court. The courts will decide.

    Somebody has to keep an eye on a 30:0 government.

    Has anybody else heard about police and covid monitors stopping people at random outside of curfew hours and asking them where they are going?

    This is also very troubling. Once it is between 6.00 a.m. and 7.00 p.m. that should not be allowed.

    This is an example of why the restrictions must be scrutinised and in some instances challenged. People with power often get out of control.

    I say go Caswell!


  26. David
    Okay.


  27. Miller
    🚫⛔❌

  28. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    “No surprise the Senator feels embolden to file court papers while the gallery cheers”
    And why not? When DC attacked the Hyatt, the same gallery (opposers) cheered. It’s like after dinner entertainment at a conference. The stars of the show build their brand. Those in powah need to lose every now and then, it confirms to all the system is still functioning. They cannot do as they please. The minions will pat themselves on the back ‘the peeple have power and must be respected’.

  29. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    I think you need an update on Yugge, that thread is back in the top 5 again.


  30. The word I would use to describe BU poster’s motives is contempt

    you may as well not read other people’s crap and just post your own

    And there’s a, and there’s a
    And there’s a, and there’s a fine, line
    Too late to pray that I’m on it
    Ya yeah yeah
    Y’all, uh huh, y’all
    There’s a fine line between love and hate you see
    Came way too late but baby I’m on it
    And there’s a fine line between love and hate you see
    Can’t wait too late but baby I’m on it
    Can’t worry bout, what a nigga think now see
    That’s Liberation and baby I want it
    Can’t worry bout, what another nigga think
    Now that’s Liberation and baby I want it

    Liberation


  31. CONTRACT JOBS
    Plan to change all senior positions in Public Service
    By Maria Bradshaw mariabradshaw@nationnews.com
    Plans are in motion to make every senior position across the Public Service contractual.
    This would affect heads of departments and break the long-standing tradition of established posts.
    Minister of Education, Technological and Vocational Training and Leader of Government Business in the House of Assembly, Santia Bradshaw, confirmed this development as she told the Sunday Sun that the previous advertised post of Chief Education Officer would have to be readvertised because that position would now be on a contract basis.
    “The position was advertised but the position is supposed to be contractual, so I think they have to re-advertise it with that in mind,” she said, adding that there had been no interviews for the post.
    “It has been put on hold and I have drawn to the attention of the Director General that that position, along with all the other key positions across Government, are supposed to be contractual,” she added, pointing out that the new Chief Agricultural Officer was appointed on contract as well as the Chief Medical Officer.
    “That is the direction pretty much everything is going,” she said, as she revealed that school principals would also be appointed on a contractual basis and this could be implemented as early as September.
    Appointment hold-ups A high-ranking Government official, who requested anonymity, told the Sunday Sun that Government had determined that appointing people to senior positions based on years of service, seniority, age and qualifications was keeping the Public Service from moving forward.
    “Government believes that there may be people who are not in the Public Service but who have the skill set and business acumen which can add value to these positions and take the Public Service forward,” he said, pointing out that younger people with modern ideas could be given an opportunity to lead.
    Referring to the General Orders, he said this already made provision for contract appointments as he quoted: “Appointments on contract for a specific duration may be made to any public office as may be determined. Officers and employees on contract are subject always to the terms and conditions of their contract. They are also subject to the rules, orders and regulations applicable to all other officers and employees in their category provided that such other rules, orders and regulations do not conflict with the terms of their contract.”
    However, Akanni McDowall, president of the National Union of Public Workers, which represents the majority of public workers, charged that any such significant change to appointments in the Public Service should be subject to dialogue because there were implications for those already in the system.
    “I understand that it’s a proposal, and no final decision has been made on the matter. Indeed, if something like this is going to happen, then the Government should consult the union because the subject is very complex. There are implications for public officers, especially those who are already in the service.”
    He further noted: “It would be a departure from established approaches since you circularise the post internally and then if you can’t find a suitable applicant, you go outside. It would naturally mean that the pool of competing people for a particular post/position now becomes wider. So a public officer has a reasonable expectation that a position would be advertised internally, and a qualified applicant will be appointed to the post without considering external applicants.
    “Another issue that could arise is when an appointed officer is contracted to serve in a higher post. No other officer can permanently fill that officer’s post; therefore, when that contractual arrangement is out, that officer has a right to return to their substantive position.”
    McDowall also submitted that existing officers accepting a contractual arrangement also compromised the way they receive a pension since at the end of each year of the contract they would get a 20 per cent gratuity. “Therefore, you can’t receive contract gratuity and continue to earn money towards your pension. If an officer is willing to live with that arrangement, then good, but you can’t have your cake and eat it too.”
    He warned that people on contract also had no recourse if they were terminated.
    When contacted, Michael Luke, a retired former principal personnel officer, said introducing contracts for school principals had been a topic of discussion during his time, but it had been rejected.
    He argued that any attempt to introduce contractual arrangements for public offices could have a demotivating effect.
    “If you have a large number of posts which are permanent under the Public Service General Order 2018, established posts, and you want to make all the posts now contractual, by that it means you wouldn’t actually have long-term positions. That could create some demotivation, which can affect your institution,” he said.
    He believes it could also affect the National Insurance Scheme (NIS).
    “My personal view is if they appoint anybody on contract, at the end of the contract period they would pay them 20 per cent of their gratuity but you don’t have to pay them long-term payment. They would be considered self-employed and would have to pay their own national insurance. When you do that, some people may not contribute to the NIS scheme and it could weaken the stability the scheme.”


    Source: Nation


  32. A recipe for corruption. People on contracts will try, rightly, to secure their futures by working with the private sector.
    This cooperation will include passing information on to them, as some senior civil servants already do. Civil servants need a clear and meritocratic career path, with proper training, not party-influenced so-called contracts.


  33. Barbados is in the middle of the worst cisis ever. Mia Mottley and her team working day and night to vaccinate and to test people.

    And what is the outspoken senator doing? Yes. Trying to sabotage our fight against Corona on the basis of some petty legal details.

    We need a new law to block any abuse of the judicial system for selfish political reasons.

    Anyway, it was a big mistake to appoint the outspoken as senator.


  34. Hal AustinMarch 14, 2021 6:19 AM

    I agree. This sounds like a recommendation from one of their ‘consultants’. The other thing is that it will potentially weaken the civil service, as people will join, gain knowledge, then leave, as they will consider that advancement is out of the question.

    The systems need changing in concert with those who have knowledge and training where necessary. Pulling it apart by removing people of knowledge, could prove disastrous.

    Might see some leaving or early retirements now. Because people with knowledge who have built something and are the ones doing the work, do not take kindly to someone coming in above and reaping the rewards of their hard work, especially if they do not have respect for those incoming.


  35. @Crusoe

    Again you are right. It seems to be the kind of crap you get from so-called consultants with MBAs. It is the easiest way to destroy the institutional memory of the civil service.
    What we must do is name and shame these consultants. If so, I wonder how much they were paid?


  36. Who was it on BU promoting contracts for Permanent Secretaries and other senior civil servants, often calling them incompetent?🤐


  37. @ Enuff March 14, 2021 1:29 PM

    Like the singer Shaggy, “It Wasn’t Me”, the miller your No. 100 nemesis.

    Why not point your accusing finger directly at the known No.1 culprit instead of pussyfooting with your “vapid” innuendo?

    Are you running scared of your UK opposite number of contradiction where your morning ‘hot’ words do not add up to your evening load of cold bullshit?

    If you are a real man you should shout out the name “Hal Asstin” the UK mad man with the Bajan conditioner for a bald head.

    Don’t be afraid of Hal as he himself is of your dictatorial president MAM.

    Do not do like him and talk behind the president’s back and not in her face.

    He is a mere windup of a windbag with no lead left in his journalistic pencil.

    It’s the “vapid” miller you have to worry about with the collapse of the Hyatt pipedream on the horizon.


  38. Step in, Mia!
    Opposition parties call on PM to intervene in BADMC row
    by ANTOINETTE CONNELL antoinetteconnell@nationnews. com
    PRIME MINISTER MIA AMOR MOTTLEY is being called on to urgently step in at the problem-plagued Barbados Agricultural Development and Marketing Corporation (BADMC), which last week fired its chief executive officer, the second time in three years.
    Both the People’s Party for Democracy and Development (PdP) and the Democratic Labour Party (DLP) said it was time for Mottley to do something about the brewing situation at the state-run agency.
    Last May, chairman Anthony Wood, a former minister of agriculture under the Barbados Labour Party, ended up quitting the corporation while levelling a number of charges about the way it was run. Last week CEO Dr Brian Francis was handed his walking papers after which a flurry of private emails with conversations and documents attached, soon made their way into the public domain.
    Yesterday, Opposition Leader and head of the PdP, Bishop Joseph Atherley, and Andre Worrell, a former senator and the DLP’s spokesperson on agriculture, said that the goings-on at the BADMC needed an intervention.
    ‘Discourteous’
    Atherley said there must be a clear-the-air statement from either the Prime Minister’s Office or the Minister of Agriculture.
    “Barbadians cannot continue to be treated in this discourteous way where you have to exist based on what is filtered out through the social media, what falls off the proverbial truck or what becomes the subject of rumours and speculation.
    “Mr Wood, the former minister who was chairman of the board, resigned . . . and he made some charges and allegations about the way the ministry is being run . . . . And now you’ve got this thing brewing with [BADMC chairman Dereck] Foster and Francis. Barbadians have to be treated better than this. This is taxpayers’ money we are dealing with,” he declared.
    Worrell said that since 2018, the BADMC had been making headlines “for all the wrong reasons”.
    “Former CEO Shawn Tudor was fired by the then chairman Anthony Wood in November of that year. That is a legal matter today. Dismissals occurred unabated. Two years later Wood himself resigned whilst hurling allegations of actions related to chicken wings and substantial revenue loss, accusations which authorities have yet to explain to the taxpaying public,” he added.
    The DLP spokesman said the most recent spat between the CEO, the chairman and the board over the proper way to terminate the services of a clerical officer, and the abrupt firing of the security services officer, pointed to an institution that lacked leadership.
    “The BADMC cannot fulfil its mandate to create new products and innovations within the agricultural sector in the midst of this type of organisational chaos. Research will show this to be the case. It is time for the Prime Minister of this country to stand by her word regarding prioritising the agricultural sector in Barbados, and launch an investigation into the unrest which is currently derailing the efforts of the farmers.”
    In yesterday’s SUNDAY SUN, Francis revealed he was fired on Friday after being suspended for more than a week, adding he was surprised by the termination. He, like Wood at the time of his resignation, is promising to tell all about what is taking place at the agency.
    He said some of his concerns would add credence to those recently raised by Wood, but said he was holding off talking for fear of compromising his own legal battle he intended to pursue against the BADMC.
    “The time will come when I speak, and when I speak this country is going to hold their head and bawl. I have the goods and I know where all of the skeletons are buried, and I want all of them to know that. I can assure you that the Barbadian public will hear from me,” Francis said.
    Last July, Wood called for an investigation into the awarding of contracts and for the firing of Minister of Agriculture Indar Weir.
    Weir has declined to comment on the latest developments at the agency.

    Source: NAtion


  39. Looks like the “trend” is still going full blast in UK.

    https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1249823835439269


  40. speaking about prison, i saw a document where Oran amalgamated with Dodds…….so what scam are they running with each other now…..that involves TENS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS….and how much is going to be STOLEN FROM TAXPAYERS…

    worth looking into….what i saw involved many, many millions of dollars…..but the Black population is struggling and broke and GOING TO PRISON….ya done know ya can’t trust the black face frauds in the slave parliament.


  41. Doing my good deed for the day..

    Double “0” Limited – Company #1639
    Gote Properties Inc. – Company #21738

    it’s ALWAYS Black people MONEY THEY ALL TIEF….so when ya hear about these companies popping up suddenly or getting name changes or AMALGAMATING…….especially when it involves PROPERTY HOLDING….WATCH THEM…


  42. it’s ALWAYS Black people MONEY and LAND …THEY ALL TIEF


  43. @EnuffMarch 14, 2021 1:29 PM

    My doubts about the government from last week have evaporated. Obviously, our government has taken my criticism to heart … 🙂

    The privatisation of the high civil service is a grandiose. With this we are trimming the state apparatus from the top down. In future, only top performers will want to serve as state secretaries, not the usual lethargic long-sleepers.
    The plan is indeed radically liberal. That is why I support it with all my neutral and balanced propaganda.

    If privatisation has proved successful, we should also privatise all other civil servants in the S grade.

    I always knew you were a Chicago Boy. Thank you, dear Enuff!


  44. Anecdotally there was a some support from the public for implementing a system to hold senior public servants to account.


  45. Perhaps …

    In any case, our beloved government is once again steering the right course – very much in the spirit of radical liberalism: weakening the state apparatus is the top priority. Privatisation, deregulation and flexibilisation, the holy triangle of the Chicago School, are taking the place of the old trinity.

    Mia Mottley has identified exactly, brilliantly as always, where to start in order to destroy the traditional civil service and with it the tropical Cuban Marxist welfare state. Once private operatives are installed at the head of the ministries, it will not be long before Mia Mottley turns the state of Barbados into a corporation: Management takes the place of government, shareholders take the place of the people.

    Welcome to the 21st century! We need a second emancipation to free people from the bondage of the welfare state.


  46. Meanwhile as Caswell fights to find a way of restoring honesty in govt
    Poor people are being threatened by govt

    https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10158404870443191&id=246784233190&sfnsn=mo

  47. WURA-War-on-U+ Avatar

    https://www.nationnews.com/2021/03/17/franklyn-take-challenge-way-ccj/

    “I want guidance from the court to tell the Government you are not all-powerful, you have to follow certain rules. I will take this all the way to the Caribbean Court of Justice because I believe in what I am doing,” he said. ”

    very few on the island stand up for human rights, that’s why the degradation is so total.


  48. Hearing the case of our outspoken senator is a massive scandal. It is obvious, even to laymen, that the Supreme Court has no jurisdiction. The emergency legislation implicitly denies recourse to any court. Moreover, it is an expression of a revolutionary new constitutional law, whereas the Supreme Court has jurisdiction only over the old constitutional order.

    I strongly urge Lord Marshal Dale to intervene here and deliver justice for our government. Fighting the pandemic is paramount. We must subordinate everything to it, following the Australian-Chinese model. Even so-called human rights, if necessary.

    Furthermore, I strongly recommend that the outspoken be deposed as ambassador for 10 years. Preferably to Brazil or South Africa.


  49. What am I reading in the media?

    Guy Hewitt criticises the personnel policy of our many embassies. We need so many embassies to offload anti-government people such as the outspoken senator. Brazil or South Africa are waiting for him.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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