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Sitting in a vehicle trapped in traffic on the highways and byways of Barbados any hour of the day has become a permanent inconvenience. The inability of authorities past and present, public and private, to effectively implement and enforce measures to address this and other woes. The problem of chronic gridlock on our roads is symptomatic of a crisis of governance.

Does the National Productivity Council still exist? How many hours are flushed daily because of idle time spent sitting in traffic by citizens who are gainfully employed?

Is the oil import bill still north of 700 million dollars? How many millions of dollars can be saved were an efficient transportation system to be implemented?

How many of the fossil powered vehicles are registered and what percentage represent electric or hybrid vehicles? How does this translate to Barbados becoming a 100 percent green and carbon neutral island by 2030?

There is the challenge to repair one of the most dense network of roads in the world made more challenging by more than 100,000 registered vehicles. This is not sustainable given limited foreign exchange resources.

The Barbados Court System was described as in danger of collapsing under its weight by Attorney General Dale Marshall. Is it fair to suggest to whom it should concern that the chaos on the roads is accentuating the problem?

The pandemic has forced providers to change how products and services are being delivered to the public. Eighteen months later the Barbados Licensing Authority and Barbados Revenue Authority are good examples of two government agencies responsible for administering road traffic being overwhelmed by the volume.

Insurance companies have reported to be paying out over 25 million dollars annually in claims. The number does not include unreported damage below the deductible or from non insured vehicle owners. Car parts are imported.

The decision by successive governments to pass on increases of the price of petrol to consumers has been a contentious issue given the inflationary impact on the economy. Recently an attempt – originating in the social media space – to buy petrol one litre at a time failed but it highlighted the thirst for fossil fuel is real.

If the analogy is borrowed to define how affairs of state is managed to compare with a system which is defined as – an interrelated set of components working together for a purpose – then the consequences of connecting the dots as it pertains to our dysfunctional transportation system is clear. It is a useful exercise to connect the dots for yourself.

What did you conclude?


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214 responses to “Dots, Dots, Dots and More Dots”


  1. Look who what I say offends wunna have my condolences.

    David’s post is true the Jews and the Cubans work as a united group as do the Indians. Any that have knowledge of how the Jews of New York became such a strong lobby would understand. They worked together and even imported goods together by all putting in the little they had, as none of them in the early days could of afforded to buy a minimum shipment on their own. The Cubans in the USA did not go their looking for Jobs. Study the landscape there and you will see many of them are self employed in small business now. Many of the earlier ones have in fact gone on to build substantial businesses as well. Truth is some will work 60 hours a week to reach their goal and others want to work 40 and wonder why they have nothing today. Stop and ask yourself if some of us had to pool our resources to get ahead how many of us would risk it! Continue crying oh is me and holding out you hand for charity while others continue to consolidate their wealth by joint ventures among themselves.

    Tired hearing the same old sad story and excuses for why we are where we are today. We are here because we don’t trust our own and will not invest as a group, but instead prefer to pull against each other while looking for handout. Who frighten to say it I just did! Long and short we do not support our own!


  2. @John A

    To add, they did it as a minority ethnic group. Pick sense from the comment.

  3. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    Oh how we have moved forward after six decades!
    Same old argument bogus as it is . We hear this crap all the time:
    Blacks don’t support blacks. Well who were we trusting from and buying groceries from all those years ?
    Who were giving our poor black children free private lessons?
    What color was the teachers going in their pockets and buying supplies for our black children?
    What color was the neighbor who gave us a meal as youngsters when our parents could not ?
    What color shops at Ricks and Jordan’s.?
    What color supporting the mechanics and body repair men?
    What color supporting the vendors
    What color supporting the activities in Oistons?
    What color built Baxter’s Road : the Pinkstar, Enids, Colins etc ?
    Please stop this foolishness. We have always supported each other.
    We can only support with what we have!
    Do you realise that people in this country still working for less than $300 per week.
    All this nonsense about Jews and others “ sticking together “ You all don’t even know that the money came out of Israel
    and the financial Centres catered to them?
    Why the ass wunnuh blaming your own Black people (the victims) for their plight. Please tell me where this level playing field is that we are playing on.
    @ John A I personally find your views pathetic yo say the very least.
    You are a black Barbadian and you have to know that pure racism has systematically destroyed many of the striving black businesses going back to the early 60s and right up to now. And we are over90% of the population.
    Like @ Donna says a lot of us seems to have adopted the white man’s narrative.
    Stop living in some make believe world. You and others seem to forget that less than three generations ago we were poor as ass barely surviving. We had almost zero generational wealth.
    Like I said recently we like we just wake up with a car , house and job and now talk absolute nonsense.
    Damn it sometimes I actually feel all ah we like we white or some shit.
    Peace.


  4. David
    Yes they did
    But Mari and Donna are still correct . They were also assisted for politically reasons ( the Cubans ).


  5. @John A

    Agree it was timing of the geopolitical flow. It is no different to Barrow leading at the time he did when England was dumping colonies. Timing is everything.


  6. The Cubans were welcomed with open arms

    The Haitians were intercepted and returned

    Make sense from that


  7. John AJuly 19, 2021 2:28 PM

    You are aware that most of the Cubans in Miami arrived there with only a suitcase if lucky. This too was the case with most of the Jews who arrived in New York in the late 40s. Yet both have become strong forces both economically and politically over the last 4 decades. So what is stopping others from doing the same

    Xxxxx Internal as well as external politics gave them plenty leverage to reach great heights
    Xxxxxxxx
    Many West Indies arrived in the USA with little or nothing had good educational backgrounds much of what would be found in the Cuban immigrant and some still struggling to become achievers on the same level of many Cubans who arrived at the same period
    Case and point Hurricane Andrew destroyed and area where Cubans occupied
    Next door or in close proximity A dominated black area was devastated
    But guess whose homes were rebuilt to a level that it was hardly noticeable of the devastation in quick time
    The blacks had to wait years for their homes to be repaired
    Don’t be fooled thinking that all it takes is one to work hard
    The politics involved is a major driving force ascto who will achieve what or when
    The Cubans came with a suitcase that is just a story with a begginning but missing is the middle and the end


  8. @ David

    Exactly. But look at what happens here. We have perfectly qualified locals but what do we allow? We allow companies to import foreigners. We have companies here capable of doing excellent work but what do we do? We give contracts to the Chinese who as part of the contract must supply everything from China, labour to shovels all must be Chinese.

    I have seen some Chinese windows used here that can’t hold a candle to our locally made ones. We go to the Chinese cause the money easy to get, but what do our people get from it? Not even the sale for a window or a door that’s what.

    You want to talk about who standing in wunna way, well start at the top and come down. What colour them is again too?

    Tired of the same old crap position when nothing is being done about it in any structured way of enfranchismemt. Look at agriculture same story. People importing chicken and so on that we can supply locally. When those with an axe to grind come talking crap tell them stop and look deeper at why we here. Instead of wunna belly aching here on the blog do like the Cubans in Miami and lobby hard for change.

    Good I dun wid dat!


  9. We are the majority group in the country but we have lost our identity. A people without an identity is like a blind man in a dark room.


  10. @ william

    You could find my comments what you want it is water off my back. What you doing to promote change? What you doing to see our chicken farmers get the opportunity to fill the orders being placed for imported chicken? What you doing to lobby that a percentage of contracts given must have the furniture etc supplied by local manufacturers? Answer is not one RH.

    You think the Cubans in Miami got such a strong lobby because the sit home and type on blogs? No they have worked among themselves and grown their economic base and how you may ask? Very simple if you own a Cuban restaurant then the lawn in front cut by a Cuban lawn maintenance company. If the restaurant do well and expand it is a Cuban contractor that will get the job. Nobody here can’t tell me bout the Cubans in Miami. I have done business with many of them. Plus guess what even when their businesses grow where you think you find most of the owners? Not up stairs in no fancy office but downstairs on the same sales floor where the wealth came from to begin with. I shop at Cartlon I ain’t shame to say so neither. When I go in there I still see the Bynoes sometimes on the shop floor. They have succeeded because they have never lost touch with their customer base and even today know that is where their future lies.

    We problem is we like to look out and find fault cause we don’t like what we see when we look in!


  11. JohnA

    We problem is we like to look out and find fault cause we don’t like what we see when we look in!

    Xxxxxxxxcxx

    What u call finding fault is what others called a task of sieving through the political realities


  12. We can only get there if we lobby for true change. The leaders must ask the below question before they borrow or spend a cent of our funds or implement a policy.

    Will doing it this way benefit the local population and economy the most? If not how can I approach this project or issue that it does?


  13. The Jews were a cohesive group, held together by a common identity
    Xxxxxx
    But don’t forget that the jews did not walk away empty handed from what was done to them during the Holocaust what they determined was a terrible and horrible event in the lives
    Up to present some of the older Jews are collecting financial reparations from Germany
    The Jews did not fight that fight alone but had Britain the UsA to help them fight for monetary justice
    Yes the unified factor help them to achieve a correction of a wrong
    However the politics at play help them to win


  14. Let us agree that a person can be brilliant in some areas and deficient in others. On the economy, I can listen to John A all day. On other matters the attention span is shorter.

    —-x—
    Even the great AC has moment of brilliance followed by long moments of less than brilliance


  15. Even the great AC has moment of brilliance followed by long moments of less than brillianc

    Xxxxxxx
    Most of what I determine in commentary is mostly by observation
    Hence those who are test book intellectuals would find my comments to be malicious or weird
    The difference between them and myself is what my mind captures through observation is not written in text books
    But are recorded in my mind as a truth hence when I barrell down a road with intent it is hard for anyone to change my mind because what I capture in my mind the ability for others to see is not in their text book way of thinking
    Now I bet some one going to say “WhAT”


  16. @ Theo

    Thanks for your kind words. What I am saying is not that different to others. My point is that although we are a small state in relation to many, we can implement policies that will uplift our economy and by extension our people. Remember all the buy Bajan campaigns etc of the past? They depended on the consumer’s patronage to succeed. I am saying we need to go further by ensuring it is policy that our local furniture manufacturers and farmers for example, are guaranteed an agreed percentage of the pie. Do what you can to help yourself first then talk about what others can do for you.


  17. DavidJuly 19, 2021 2:40 PM

    @John A

    Their success was as a group.

    DonnaJuly 19, 2021 2:50 PM

    Correct, David. The Jews were a cohesive group, held together by a common identity.

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

    Family units.

    There is plenty of division in the Jewish community, Orthodox and un orthodox, Ashkenazi and Shephardim

    But one thing all sections of Cubans and Jews have in common, strong family units.

    Here is an example of a Cuban family unit that did exceptionally well.

    Estefan’s paternal grandparents were José Manuel Fajardo González (who ran one of the first Cuban restaurants in Miami, Florida) and Amelia Montano (who was a poet).[14][15][16] Estefan also had uncles who were singer-songwriters.[16] Her father José was a Cuban soldier and a motor escort for the wife of Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista. As a result of the Cuban Revolution, the Fajardo family fled to Miami in 1959 and settled there. In 1961 José participated in the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion. He was captured by his cousin, who was a member of Fidel Castro’s army, and imprisoned in Cuba for nearly two years.[5] On his return he joined the United States military and fought in the Vietnam War.


  18. An example of a very strong Jewish family unit that did very well is the Rothschild family.

    I suspect it even had business links through trade and finance to Barbados through the Motefiore family.

    Fortunes were made in trade and finance.

  19. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ John A
    Your thesis is flawed. You are blaming the Black victims. You are also inaccurate when you join others in saying Blacks don’t support Blacks. How the hell do you think we have survived past and present hardships ?What you and others need to ask yourselves is why after nearly sixty years of independence, we are still having this debate. It is virtually impossible to have a enlightened discussion with those who want to sweep historical facts under the carpet. Here we are talking about Cubans in Miami and Jews in the USA, who have all cashed in the rampant racism against Afro Americans. First we need to ask ourselves who financed the anti-Castro/Revolution Cubans in Miami.
    Then we must aske ourselves who financed the Jews in New York and elsewhere.
    Why not talk about why Black Wall Street was burnt to the ground ? Who burnt it flat ?
    Then when you switch to our country ask yourself some very simple questions such as: Where would Black aspiring business people get substantial collateral to finance businesses ? Where is the abundance of generational wealth. Call Rawle Brancker and he might find a few minutes to educate and inform you on these matters.
    Asking me what I do and have done is irrelevant at this point. Note, I never asked you any such thing.


  20. If you want to understand the make up of the Cuban business people I suggest you read the story of Cuban Billionaire Mike Fernadez a Cuban that came to the USA with nothing. When you have nothing to fall back on all that you can do is go forward and do what ever it takes to survive.


  21. Why should I call Rawle Brancker when I can call Mr Bynoe at Carlton or Mr Hoyte at Terrific Tiles, or Mr Lynch at Home Improvement Hardwares who also owns Southern Plaza in Oistins and hear of his success?

    For every black failure you list I can list a black success story. Some live in the past while others look towards a better future.


  22. John AJuly 19, 2021 6:56 PM

    If you want to understand the make up of the Cuban business people I suggest you read the story of Cuban Billionaire Mike Fernadez a Cuban that came to the USA with nothing. When you have nothing to fall back on all that you can do is go forward and do what ever it takes to

    Xxxxx
    There are many such like stories
    But there are many even with hard work and knowledge did not make it pass the first stop
    Not because they were stupid but stumbling blocks played a pivotal role in their way
    The Cubans were handed a platter of goods the day they landed in Miami
    Several doors which were closed to other ethic groups were opened to them
    Some never even bother to learn English but got jobs in hospitals some were govt jobs
    They were included from day one and accepted by the govt as people who were in dire need of help
    Hence govt welfare took care of their every need for years and up to present
    Cheques food stamps free housing with immediacy while blacks names were on waiting list for months on ends waiting approval
    Meanwhile govt loans for low income workers were approved for them with immediacy to start businesses and buy homes
    On the other hand the blacks we’re given all types of excuses
    The plan was for the Cubans to forged ahead build business which would mostly employ their own
    The road for success started at that point and has never stopped
    Blacks were caught off guard thinking that language would stop the Cubans from achieving but it was not to be so Govt had their backs gave them what they wanted in helping them to build several stories of success
    Along the way came their own banks and the rest is history
    Cubans got it all in thirty years while blacks await a promise of forty acres and a mule


  23. @John A

    In a Black majority country despite the so-called establishment we should be doing a better job at enfranchisement. As you pointed there are enough successful businesses in the country to show piece/shop around as models for success. We need to start more doing.


  24. JohnA

    So who support those black business that you just mentioned?
    The 3% or the chinese?


  25. DavidJuly 19, 2021 7:45 PM

    @John A

    In a Black majority country despite the so-called establishment we should be doing a better job at enfranchisement. As you pointed there are enough successful businesses in the country to show piece/shop around as models for success. We need to start more doing.

    Xxxxxx
    What would one call success in Barbados as an enough successful black businesses
    One or two or even twenty is not enough in a country managed by all black government
    My observing eye points me to the south …East and west coast were I several lots of white established businesses
    Hardly find one black in the midst unless one looks long and hard


  26. @angela cox: “Hardly find one black in the midst unless one looks long and hard

    Everyone I report to happens to be Black. I didn’t actually notice that until asked.


  27. We have many black owned businesses in Barbados. Some of us are confusing the issue of black owned businesses with who owns big business and control the wealth (includes power).

  28. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ John A
    “Why should I call Rawle Brancker when I can call Mr Bynoe at Carlton or Mr Hoyte at Terrific Tiles, or Mr Lynch at Home Improvement Hardwares who also owns Southern Plaza in Oistins and hear of his success?”

    Now please answer this: Which race supported the above businesses ?
    That’s the damn point I keep making here on BU. The crap you and others talking about “ blacks not supporting blacks” is inaccurate and essentially baseless.
    We have always supported each other. Ask Bynoe, Hoyte or Lynch who makes up the biggest slice of their customers?
    Sometimes we just get carried away with unsubstantiated nonsense. We eagerly drink the divide and rule cool aid , used so violently during slavery.
    We all want to move forward but we can’t do so by pretending that the playing field is level.
    Right now as we speak there are hundreds of young , bright black business people who can’t get a leg up. And that should be our focus rather than come here trying to sell a pig in the bag.


  29. Barbados is a majority Black country, obviously all successful businesses here must have majority black customers. When the talk is about why Blacks don’t support black business we mean what again?


  30. @WS: “Right now as we speak there are hundreds of young , bright black business people who can’t get a leg up. And that should be our focus rather than come here trying to sell a pig in the bag.

    Hear! Hear.


  31. @BU_David: “When the talk is about why Blacks don’t support black business we mean what again?

    I hope, and expect, that you appreciate what I’m saying is said honestly.

    Most of us actually work together. Supporting each other.

    Doing otherwise would be sub-optimal.


  32. When I spoke earlier about the success of others I spoke to the pooling of resources to purchase as is done by others. I never spoke about black clients patronizing black retail businesses. There is a big difference!

    What I speak of is a group of small black business people pooling their resources to buy say a 40 ft container of a commodity, as opposed to each buying a few cases of the same item from Massy at higher prices. How many of you for instance know that practically all of the Indians who sell in the country from their vans and cars are supplied by basically 3 larger Indian merchants. Here is how they work.

    The Indian merchants give the self employed salesman who own their vans the products on consignment. They then go into the country and sell with the understanding that a percentage must be returned to the merchant to cover the cost of the goods taken. Next week the same thing happens and the traveling salesman has his van refilled. That type of arrangement calls for trust and respect among the parties involved. Once that is done all those involved prosper.

    That fellow bloggers is what I mean when I speak about people working together and pooling resources for the benefit of all involved. Few also know how diversified the Indian business holdings here now are as well. They have branched out in many non traditional sectors from health care to insurance just to mention a few.

    To attempt to explain this further would be pointless so I rest my case on this issue. If they are those that still don’t understand the point I am trying to get across I can help with no further explanation.

  33. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ David
    “Barbados is a majority Black country, obviously all successful businesses here must have majority black customers. When the talk is about why Blacks don’t support black business we mean what again?”

    You are one of the main ones on BU pushing a whole heap of nonsense about this blacks supporting not blacks foolishness.
    Barbados was built and remains on a colonialist built retail plantation economy. When we spend our often meager earnings with black businesses, we are really spending all we have.
    We are just two generations removed from poverty. A lot of the wealth built up has been done by black professionals because by the late 70s most of the black businesses had succumb to a consumer base it could no longer satisfy.’
    This made a clear path for the next generation of whites to dominate the expanding post independence economy.
    You and others need to recognize that the public service was always the major employer of the same black middle class we talk about. As late as the 70s many public servants were earning below $300 per month.
    The problem is that for the last forty years salaries have not kept up with inflation and it’s difficult to control consumer spending in open economies.
    In the meantime all the distribution trades, shipping, tourism, car dealerships remained in the hands of the mainly white corporate barons.
    In other words were it not for the growth of the credit Union movement many of us could not buy homes or purchase cars etc.
    Banks are not charitable organizations. We disposed of the only national bank and then came correspondent banking and a host of international agreements, that essentially made it increasingly difficult for our indigenous black manufacturing class to survive.
    There are very few young black business people who can source $250000 or more from old money or generational wealth.
    I know lawyers who graduated and could not buy a chair far less open a practice. Same with doctors, accounts etc.
    We need to discuss such subjects in a broader context. Do you really think there are thousands of blacks out there who have million to invest? Don’t you know that the average person cannot buy the black belly lamb in the supermarkets because it is nearly three times as expensive as the imported lamb?
    Let’s get real and start to discuss how we can radically reform the country to give each citizen a fair break. We need to stop this nauseating pie-in-the-sky mumbo jumbo and start to deal with the deep socio economic disparities we have .
    Sometimes I feel as if we Blacks are a frigging minority begging for social and economic rights.
    As Adonijah says: There are two Barbados.


  34. @William

    You have no idea. Your head is burrowed very deep in it as far as what is unfolding in Barbados. You remind the blogmaster of the matador facing the bull with a red rag. All you see is red, oops black!


  35. @John A

    There is something else the minorities do, they target key persons in positions of authority to do you know what.


  36. William Skinner,

    You are obviously correct. No black customers, no business.


  37. Well… John A just said it so, by God, it must be so!

    Murdaaaah!

  38. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @JohnA
    “That type of arrangement calls for trust and respect” and also enforcement. Never forget that part. Or soon 3 of the top sellers will figure out they can get together, and order in bulk?
    The ‘key’ to the Massy game is being large enough to control your suppliers. To stop them selling to your largest customers. If they do, you must cut them a new asshole immediately.
    The second issue is credit. It is a double headed monster, in the import game. International suppliers rarely extend credit. But to sell locally one must.


  39. Having said that, I do believe more of us could overcome in Barbados by pooling our resources but that is DESPITE THE DELIBERATE ROAD BLOCKS not because they do not exist.

    Still, nobody burning down our businesses like in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

    P.S. Lobbying is not just mout talk. Money talks even louder. Large campaign contributions buy favourable legislation and policy AND LARGE GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS.

    Some people playing dem doan know!


  40. And as for the other John re the strong family units – I hear there were strong family units where our ancestors came from.

    But… slavery tore families apart. Their could be no strong family units under the slave system. The men were used as studs and the woman routinely raped by the slavers. Children were sold away from their mothers.

    After three hundred years, the slaves knew nothing about family structure.

    Still the white man’s fault.


  41. Is the crime rate in Barbados steadily increasing daily
    Or is it my imagination ?
    It seems that our social environment is heading similar in the same direction as Jamaica
    The IMF has been managing the economic affairs of Jamaica
    The IMF is managing the economic affairs of Barbados

  42. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    @ Donna
    You are more than correct!
    Amazingly we have people here comparing slaves with political refugees!
    They need to tell us what were the similarities of the Cuban experience in Miami and the slaves who were brought to the Caribbean. They also need to tell us about the similarities of the Jews and the slaves brought here from Africa. They also need to tell us about the similarities of the indentured Indians brought to this region and the slaves.
    These people are behaving as if the slaves freely swam from Africa here because of a dictatorship. As you have correctly stated the black family was literally destroyed by white slave masters.
    We are here taking a people, our own people, who were treated worst than cattle and comparing them with people who were not captured but escaped a political system they did not favor.
    Its only due to our incredible resilience that we established new families and then extended families after we we were brutalized and driven into the ground.
    That’s not “ living in the past”or only “ seeing black”. That’s our history.
    And those who feel we are going to go forward without realizing that are the ones who have us stuck where we are today.
    I don’t have the tenacity or resilience of WURA but this current discussion clearly shows why we need @ WURA on this blog.


  43. Pooling? Sou sou , credit unions., purchiing and reselling will soon come

    Housing and cars came mostly through the credit unions, We don’t have to do it the Indians way


  44. @John2

    The minorities pool cash/equity. Some of you guys dont get it. Try to judge from where we are today.

    #nocredit!


  45. When all said and done the majority population would have nothing to pool or share
    Pockets empty because of govt stronghold policies of fees and taxes along with high energy cost and food prices


  46. David

    All will agree the minorities pool

    I was respond to John A comment that WE don’t pool to purchase and resell

    I the beginning we had nothing to pool so we used to share what we grow
    U give me ur yams I give u my potatoes

    After we started getting a shilling we sou sou

    Then when we got a dollar we credit union

    Through the credit union we get better houses and cars. We still got a long way to go but it false to say we do not pool for our own up liftment

    To purchase and resell may be correct though. We will not get there using the Indian model but through the credit unions

    Barbados


  47. @John2

    There is 9 billion in savings belonging to mostly Black bajans.


  48. The IMF sits some where in Washington far away from the internal economic issues of the day that burdens barbadians household
    Govt seems to agree with ever decision the IMF makes decisions running against the best interest of barbadian households
    However decisions made by the ImF which benefits international lending agencies which in return grants govt a favour status of accessing more loans to strap on the shoulders of barbadians
    This is serious business


  49. Didn’t u guy have this conversation
    It seem like I am repeating Someone (that I probably agreed with)

  50. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @David
    Is that because the minorities have their savings in offshore accounts?

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