Submitted by Pachamama

We have become well use to, in politics, elected dictatorships masquerading as democracies in the Caribbean. However, there are other formations within the miseducation system, amongst the top corporations, civil society and elsewhere. Of course, there are interlocking connections between and amongst these.

The University of the West Indies has long pretended to be a strict adherent to the notion that special dispensations were not ever to be given, especially relating to matters of contracts, tenure, retirement, appointments and so forth. It was supposedly to be about the maintenance of exemplary academic standards.

That normal university rules would not, for example, allow a vice chancellor to serve beyond age 65, or there about, far less permit the university’s highest operational manager to extend his service to over the age of 70 with a six year renewal, which the recent disclosures will mean.

When any one person, entirely based on a vicious respectability ethos, which Hilary Beckles himself has substantially erected, is guided by the notion that there can be nobody in the region, or from amongst the diaspora, possessing the skills, competencies and capabilities to replace him, we are not just bordering on a dictatorial impulse but are exhibiting degenerative, full blown, dictatorial tendencies in the very place where critical interrogation should be the hallmark.

This is the same Beckles who misguidedly declared that the last election victory of the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) was a ‘Mottley revolution’. Where is that revolution? It can be only found within the context of his budgetary position as he seeks to promote backwardness at Cave Hill and elsewhere at a heightened industrial scale not dissimilar to the production of widgets.

This is the same Beckles who still fails to see that it is a moral crime, double, to distil the sacred sacrifices of our ancestors into pottage for the miseducation of Caribbean peoples. There has been no permissions granted him by this descendant of Afrikan slaves to take property in our stead. Beckles in so doing is committing a crime which could never be forgiven. Certainly it is high time for a civil and/or criminal complaint be lodged in an international court of competent jurisdiction to stop Beckles and his ilk from selling-out our sacred ancestors. For the ultimate decision making body of the UWI to impose on Caribbean peoples six (6) more years of this tyrant speaks for itself. To presume dictatorship over the living is one calculation, but such desecrations of the sacrifices of the ancestors must not be permitted.

This is the same Beckles who, along with Owen Arthur – the late, Mia Mottley, Ralph Gonzales, an ‘influenced’ Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) and others joined with the Modi-inspired PPP of Guyana to subvert the country’s political process in the interests of the State Department of the United States of America. This kind of interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign CARICOM state should qualify as a high crime, not rewarded with an ability to do more damage to the region over a longer period of time.

Hilary Beckles and his newly-found class of leading ‘blacks’ in the Caribbean continue to fail when measured by their inability to deliver us from any single one of the many intractable problems this region continues to face. Those who are expected to be lorded over should have a right, an expectation, that Beckles and the so-called elites would be able to move the needle forward, even an inch. The reverse is unfortunately a truism when petty dictators rule.

76 responses to “HILARY BECKLES AND THE CONSOLIDATION OF REGIONAL DICTATORSHIPS”


  1. Suck my dick Bitch
    Stand up and Fight Black Man
    Stand Up And Fight Dub

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3Df4P2QYZw


  2. “This is a fallacious ‘word salad’ as the doc would say…

    WHO helped make the acquisitions over those 5 decades? :THE SELF SAME BLACK MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT.”
    .XXX If you paid a man money to build a mansion and when you got there you saw a 2×3 shack would you be satisfied? Our assertion is that the five decades could have been more productive and useful to the nation; the claim that they did do something does not refute this assertion.

    “Who knowingly elected and elects them time after time?: THE SELF SAME BLACK POPULATION.”
    xxx And given only the choice of these two evils, we will be electing them for another five decades, if nothing changes. That is the system we have. We should not allow anyone to transfer the blame for mismanagement onto the shoulders of the black electorate.

    :”When any BAJAN is torn down who suffers?: BARBAODS AND THUS THOSE TOO IN GOVERNANCE”.
    xx In other words, suffer in silence because your description of reality is tearing Barbados down. It is their actions that is making them look bad, not our words. How would you expect us to describe a cold blooded murder?

    “It is TRUE that we have a corrupt governance and an unacceptable ownership of commerce by the non-Black, minority groups; it is also true that we have suffered pain over these many years”
    After all of the above “Wura is right”


  3. @ Nairobi 555

    I marched in Cape-Town/Johannesburg against South African Apartheid oppressed laws in 1975. What have you contributed to the cause.

    Kim Tubby Reggae..???????????

    You bloody Toffee..you..


  4. @ Mr. Dickson AKA-Nairobi 555

    Erma Ladouce didn’t do my homework for bathroom favors when I attended HIGH SCHOOL. I did my own..

    Three fish in a can eating Toffee..


  5. Lick the spit off my balls you bitch
    Ruff a them

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ciIGQrNh-c


  6. @ Mr. Dickson AKA-Nairobi 555

    I Walk a thousand miles for freedom..

    And you?

  7. Cuhdear Bajan Avatar

    @Pachamama May 21, 2021 2:29 PM “If you knew these actors as non public persons you may be less accepting.”

    My family has known the Beckles/Levine family for many, many. many generations, as least as far back as Hilary’s 4 grandparents, in fact we may well have arrived on the same ship, and we have supported each other, helped out each other, looked out for our communities over these many generations, in slavery, in “apprenticeship” and in freedom. Hilary is not as described by Pachamama, Waru and others.

    Pacha, waru and others are lying. All lies, with a good bit of envy and jealousy thrown in.


  8. @ Mr. Dickson AKA-Nairobi 555

    De Antonov An-225 Mriya, went over your steak & kidney pie head and you called it a sparrow…What a wee wee you..


  9. Shut up with your war stories old man

    Gotta Be Strong

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06b4mUhX5Aw


  10. People make the world go ’round

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VxD5sxLGBNY

  11. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    “Pacha, waru and others are lying. All lies, with a good bit of envy and jealousy thrown in.”

    wuh you been drinking, ya mad, you really tell yaself that i want to model a colonial YOKE around my neck….cuddear, lay off the bottle.

    there is that issue with lack of self-respect rearing its ugly head again.

  12. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Senor, your analysis is a circular torturous absurdity to SINGLE OUT BAJANS for your and the blogger’s inane refrain… your assertions in different guises (with and without the racial context) applies to every single one of the 190 plus nations of earth.

    To continually proselytize of Bajan woes in this specificity of OUR parliamentary slaves is discriminatory, and woefully unproductive.

    “.XXX If you paid a man money to build a mansion and when you got there you saw a 2×3 shack would you be satisfied? Our assertion is that the five decades could have been more productive and useful to the nation; the claim that they did do something does not refute this assertion.”

    More productive according to what EXACTLY!

    Everything can be improved so that’s clearly a non-argument… the point would be to compare our nation to others of similar status and objectively determine that we SQUANDERED our ‘talents’ as seen against those others .

    No one built a shack. .. a solid dwelling of stone and outer gardens for repose was constructed … the fact is yes that a MANSION was NOT constructed and could have been.

    Improvement were possible,,,…surely yes … but certainly no shack was built by Adams, Barrow et al.

    As I said discriminatory, absurd ‘cancel culture’s nonsense!

    “xxx And given only the choice of these two evils, we will be electing them for another five decades, if nothing changes. That is the system we have. We should not allow anyone to transfer the blame for mismanagement onto the shoulders of the black electorate.”

    Oh really, so who shoulders the blame. Politicians are from the populace sir not Mars or Venus.

    If we elected Mia AFTER a ‘respected’ former PM labelled her a danger to the nation… then who is to blame when things go wrong… if not us.

    “xx In other words, suffer in silence because your description of reality is tearing Barbados down. It is their actions that is making them look bad, not our words. How would you expect us to describe a cold blooded murder?”

    Describe it as we are accomplises … or accessories before and after the fact. That is ALSO a crime carrying stiff penalties!

    No one said anything about suffering in silence …
    but throwing shade at an entire nation of people is not purposeful either.

    If you guys see this cacophony as useful then more power to you … I simply dont …. I dont need her/him to tell me what or who MY MPs are … good lord, I like every other Bajan sat in classrooms next to some of them, played cricket, road tennis or football with some, argued on cadet/scout/debating/ISCF/whatever group meetings with others or are related and ting and ting … we need her/his diatribes to prove what exactly about them!

    We are them and they are us so what you perceive as freaking new with your assertions confounds me.

  13. Cuhdear Bajan Avatar

    @WURA-War-on-U May 22, 2021 9:05 PM “…cuddear, lay off the bottle….”

    Haven’t been drunk, or even slightly impaired by any substance since 1978. Clear headed ALWAYS.


  14. A close reading would show that you agree with what is stated. It appears that your complaint is not with the actual content but with the lack of mellifluous and dulcet tones.

    Your first paragraph is merely a repeat of the usual defense ‘shit also happens elsewhere’.

    Paragraph 2, 3, 4, 5. Not a shack, not a mansion, something in between was built.

    “If we elected Mia AFTER a ‘respected’ former PM labelled her a danger to the nation… then who is to blame when things go wrong… if not us.”
    xx Reality would have informed you that there were just two choices of which Mia was one. Part of our complaint is that after attaining office these politicians become deaf to the mellifluous voices of the people.

    The rest of it ….I have not thrown shade at Barbados. If, in my opinion, things are done well then I lend my support. If they are not done well, then I will say so.
    And if a blogger hits notes that sound correct, then to some it is a melody and not a cacophony.

    I had a roommate who for a year greeted the day with “Life is a bitch”. So too is reality… learn to live in it.


  15. My family has known the Beckles/Levine family for many, many. many generations, as least as far back as Hilary’s 4 grandparents, in fact we may well have arrived on the same ship, and we have supported each other, helped out each other, looked out for our , and we have supported each other, helped out each other, looked out for our communities over these many generations, in slavery, in “apprenticeship” and in freedom. Hilary is not as described by Pachamama, Waru and others.

    Pacha, waru and others are lying. All lies, with a good bit of envy and jealousy thrown in.
    communities over these many generations, in slavery, in “apprenticeship” and in freedom. Hilary is not as described by Pachamama, Waru and others.

    Pacha, waru and others are lying. All lies, with a good bit of envy and jealousy thrown in.

    BU can be another echo chamber on the net which was taken over by alt-right / right wing trolls that fed the Trump monster who eventually became the figurehead for racist white supremacist gaslighting anti-immigration movements and is similar in some or many ways except it is by a small group of anonymous blacks in Barbados not whites with tropes and paranoia against minorities in Barbados

    Them is the next series on Amazon Prime to watch where a black family moves from North Carolina to Compton which was an all-white Los Angeles neighbourhood in 1953, where their idyllic home becomes ground zero for malevolent force and explores imperative themes of racial discrimination. The narrative utilises horror elements to imaginatively explore such themes.

    People may have heard about Republican’s Southern Strategy from Nixon’s days after Civil Rights when the Party agenda preyed on white paranoia about blacks moving West and North from South into their neighbourhood schools and places of work and the fear of racial mixing with jungle bunnies, or seen pictures or movies about hostility against black children integrating in schools like Little Rock and being surrounding by mobs of whites, or black men being pushed around or beaten up in white neighbourhoods or Black people lynched by white communities.


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVfn1LSP1g8


  16. Interesting report. This is the extract to take note.

    “In that same meeting, Registrar of CXC Dr Wayne Wesley disclosed that following consultations with the ministers of education of the participating territories, with input from the Caribbean Union of Teachers (CUT), it was the consensus of CXC’s council that the start date be put back by two weeks and shifted to June 28, 2021, with release of results scheduled for the last week of September to the first week in October.”

    UNICEF ‘surprise’
    Sir Hilary says CXC concerns raised without all the facts
    CHAIRMAN OF THE Caribbean Examination Council (CXC), Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, says the organisation is a “little surprised” by the recent concerns raised by UNICEF over the format of this year’s suite of regional exams.
    He also suggested the international body raised an alarm “without first having all of the information at their fingertips”.
    Speaking at a virtual press conference held yesterday, Sir Hilary stressed that the regional testing body was on the same page with United Nation’s Children’s Fund (UNICEF), as CXC was dedicated to the “principles of fairness”.
    He said the new changes announced yesterday were testimony to their endeavour to account for psychosocial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the volcanic eruption in St Vincent.
    The major change announced yesterday was a two-week delay to the start of the exams. It was also revealed that the orginal format would be maintained – paper one and two, in addition to the school-based assessment.
    Earlier this week, both the spokesperson for the Group of Concerned Parents Barbados, the Regional Coalition for CXC Exam Redress, Paula-Anne Moore and student advocate Khaleel Kothdiwala, said if CXC had heeded the similar concerns raised by them, they would have avoided embarrassment on the international stage.
    However, Sir Hilary chalked up the entire episode to simple miscommunication, something which he said had now been remedied.
    “We did see the UNICEF release and I did speak to a UNICEF official this morning [Wednesday] about this matter. Clearly what UNICEEF is doing is reflecting their own broad policy and concern about the children of the region. I took pleasure in informing them that when the release was made, we were in the middle of those conversations and that we are committed to the fairness principle… We took the fairness principle throughout all of the course of all of our conversations and deliberations with our ministers and our unions. So, we were already in the midst of this dialogue around those issues,” said Sir Hilary.
    In that same meeting, Registrar of CXC Dr Wayne Wesley disclosed that following consultations with the ministers of education of the participating territories, with input from the Caribbean Union of Teachers (CUT), it was the consensus of CXC’s council that the start date be put back by two weeks and shifted to June 28, 2021, with release of results scheduled for the last week of September to the first week in October.
    He also said the exam would maintain its original format, which is a paper one and two, in addition to the school-based assessment. Additionally, the deadline for those wishing to avail themselves of the option to defer has been extended until May 30. An extension up to June 30, 2021 was also granted for the submission of schoolbased assessments. “After careful deliberation and consideration of all the pertinent issues, council agreed that the revised schedule for the 2021 exams should be as follows; CXC shall maintain the administration of the Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Exam (CAPE), Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) and Caribbean Certificate of Secondary Level Competence (CCLSC), in their original format . . . Council also approved the delay of the sitting of examinations by a further two weeks. This would provide candidates extra time to prepare for the examination,” Wesley explained.
    Sir Hilary said during the discussions it was borne out that the majority of countries indicated their students were ready for the exams while Wesley pointed out that only five per cent of the students had opted for deferrals in CSEC. It was also revealed that less than one per cent of those sitting CAPE had availed themselves of that option.

    Source: Nation


  17. The struggle is real, and it continues.

    CXC delay ‘not enough’
    A TWO-WEEK delay is not sufficient.
    Parent advocate and spokesperson for the Group of Concerned Parents and the Regional Coalition for Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) Exam Redress, Paula-Anne Moore, and student advocate Khaleel Kothdiwala, held that stance following the announcement that the regional body postponed their testing by 14 days.
    During a press conference yesterday, chaired by Sir Hilary Beckles, CXC’s registrar Dr Wayne Wesley said the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC), Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination (CAPE) and Caribbean Certificate of Secondary Level Competence (CCSLC) in-person examinations, which were scheduled to begin on June 15, were pushed back to Thursday, June 28.
    Although the regional examinations body said they decided after consultation with the ministers of education and input from the Caribbean Union of Teachers (CUT), the local advocates were not impressed.
    Disappointed
    Moore told the
    DAILY NATION she was disappointed by plans, which she said had serious implications for students’ mental health.
    “I have the utmost respect for Sir Hilary’s scholarship and leadership of The University of the West Indies (UWI), but we cannot help but to be deeply disappointed, but not surprised, that CXC has continued its utter tone-deafness and rejection of the mental and emotional distress of the children and has continued business as usual with respect to the 2021 exit assessment.
    “The mere twoweek delay means less than nothing to the thousands of students and it will further put children not only at mental risk but potentially greater infection with respect to COVID-19. Insisting on these in-person exams is in direct contradiction to what has obtained worldwide,” Moore said.
    In a joint statement prepared by Moore and Kothdiwala, the student advocate suggested that CXC and Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD) did not do right by the region’s children by retaining a similar weight of subjects, despite pleadings from various stakeholders including UNICEF.
    Failed
    “COHSOD had also failed its responsibility to hold its children harmless from emotional mental harm and the potential infection risk of COVID-19, contrary to worldwide education authorities practising best practice.
    “CXC is pursuing pre-pandemic exam structure with the same number of papers, same size syllabi and a mere two-week delay. Some children will be ready but they will be potentially out at risk re public transport, others will be at further mental risk,” the statement read.
    During the press conference, Wesley also noted COVID-19 and the volcanic eruption in St Vincent, had also led to the pushback. The exams will return to their original formats, which include the multiple-choice Paper I and Paper II, in addition to the school-based assessment (SBA). Although Paper Two was removed last year, discrepancies in the results led to several protests.
    The deadline for those wishing to defer was extended until May 30 and an extension up to June 30 was also granted for the submission of SBAs. He also said special considerations were being worked out for the students of St Vincent & the Grenadines, who are still displaced by the volcanic eruptions. (TG)

  18. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    I reiterate:

    none of them impress me, don’t have to appease not one of these bullshit artists.

    they are always surprised when they get caught violating rights. CXC has done crap for decades with their uppity ill-mannered selves and little itty bitty power over too many children’s lives..parents who can afford to have to find a better way.

    “Hilary Beckles, says the organisation is a “little surprised” by the recent concerns raised by UNICEF over the format of this year’s suite of regional exams.

    He also suggested the international body raised an alarm “without first having all of the information at their fingertips”.

  19. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    I don’t pay attention to the fools who would support generations of crimes against local and regional children and the populations, just because they know and have familial ties, grew up with or are closely connected to the criminals…and then got the nerve to question why the parliament and supreme court are so corrupt..

    they can’t even see the double standards.

  20. WURA-War-on-U Avatar

    colonial frauds…”get on with their lives” despite the DIFFICULTIES CXC CREATED FOR THEM…what else are hey expected to do, they know fully well these titled negros are quite capable of making their lives even harder than what it is right now.

    imagine what they would do to the people and the young generation if they had gotten a dime of reparations money in their hands…


  21. BUT: Students could lose out if they defer
    By Colville Mounsey
    colvillemounsey@nationnews.com
    President of the Barbados Union of Teachers (BUT), Pedro Shepherd, says the deferral option for students in this year’s Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) exams is a catch-22 situation because school places for them in the future could be in jeopardy.
    He said while his membership indicated students were largely unprepared to sit the Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Exam (CAPE) and the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) tests, the uncertainty of deferral had left them with little choice.
    Deferral has been placed on the table for those whose preparedness has been severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic as well as April’s volcanic eruption in St Vincent.
    Shepherd told the
    Weekend Nation
    he was informed that several schools had already told their fifth form students that they could not be guaranteed a space next year should they defer the exams, and might have to go the route of doing them privately.
    Need for space
    “I don’t know how you could even consider deferring students in this environment. I understand that the children are not prepared for the exams, but to defer students would mean that you need to have space. In my view, if you defer one, you should defer all because to give options for deferral is going to pose some serious challenges.
    “Unless the Ministry of Education can come up with facilities and staffing that they can accommodate deferrals all in one or two locations, it is going to become a serious problem.
    “Even at the beginning of the school year when you are looking for allocation of sixth form, that is a process that takes a lot of time, so I really don’t understand the option to defer,” the BUT head said.
    Efforts to reach Minister of Education Santia Bradshaw were unsuccessful.
    Same problem
    Meanwhile, a source in the Barbados Secondary Teachers’ Union (BSTU) said they were encountering the same problem and even though the ministry had said earlier this was not the case, it was the message students were getting from their respective schools.
    “Originally, children were being asked to make a decision without first knowing the broad topics. Some children in some countries were told that if they deferred, they can’t go back into school and that there would be no place for them.
    “Even here in Barbados, there are some principals, and I know of four schools, who would have told their students that there are no guaranteed spots in the school and that has turned off a lot of students from deferring. Any impression that the students don’t want to defer because they are ready is false,” the source said.
    During a press conference last Wednesday, CXC chairman, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, said that during consultations in the lead-up to the decision to delay the exams by two weeks, the majority of countries indicated their students were ready. He added that only five per cent of the students had opted for deferrals in CSEC, and less than one per cent for CAPE.
    More time
    “Some countries wanted a little more than two weeks – some wanted three weeks, some wanted five weeks – so there was this diverse view based on the specifics of each country. We all realised that practicality was necessary, as there were also some countries that said we are ready now. In fact, probably the majority of the countries were saying that we are ready now.” Sir Hilary made it clear that CXC was merely the administrator of the exams and it was the ministers of education who arrived at this consensus.
    Shepherd said a lot hinged on students being able to retain enough of the topics skimmed through in order to get some sort of grade in the exams.
    “A lot of teachers are saying that their students are not ready. At the secondary level, the teachers are asking for topics [in] the hope that the child studies it on their own or they are able to quickly review, so that the student can get some sort of mark.
    “So, the student may not have the full comprehension of the topic but he or she knows that it is coming and they would have studied it over a twoday period and therefore able to write something and get something.
    “This is the approach that is taken, which, in my view, is nonsense,” he said.

    Source: Nation


  22. This not a solution or suggestion, merely a question.

    Do you remember how some students took ‘London’ exams if they could not take
    those administered by Cambridge? Does CXC gives students who are not enrolled in a school, the opportunity to take CXC exams?

    I remember adults taking exams and therefore getting a second chance to escape by passing these tests. Has CXC closed this window for the older folks?

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