About 20 years ago as we crossed the street to get on to East Street there was a group of people ahead of us and one of the women was lugging a suitcase. We were going to the East Street Vendors Market in London. My son who was five then was with me and when we reached the market, we started to browse. Suddenly raised voices were heard above the normal chatter. Two women on the other side of the street were arguing loudly and it was escalating. Next, they seemed to be on the verge of exchanging blows and all eyes were focused on them; no one was focused on the items on display. From my distance across the street, I was trying to figure out what was happening and if to leave when my son said, “mummy look! that woman is putting the people’s things in her suitcase.” He could not see what was happening across the street only what was happening on our side at his eye level.

It was then that I realized that the distraction had been planned. The group had created a distraction and shifted everyone’s focus and in the ensuing confusion, made the vendors goods easy prey to theft.

Is this what has been happening in Barbados? Think about it, the prorogation of Parliament for no reason that has been made public to this day and the Throne Speech from hell with its mandate for a Republic, the buying out of the leadership of the Barbados Workers Union, the largest trade union in Barbados and the by-election in St. George North. Even the pandemic played into the government’s hand as they used it to change the terms of the Severance Pay Act.

The above distractions have caused confusion and shifted the attention of the people of Barbados away from the performance of the economy, unemployment, the fact that this Administration is not providing any solutions, a refusal to diversify the economy, increasing debt and the Chinese invasion of Barbados.

The Prime Minister does not deliver clear messages. There is more information in the foreign press than from the Government of Barbados about its relationship with China. It looks good and sounds great to hear that the Prime Minister had a telephone call with President Xi but ask any Barbadian what was discussed. They will not have a clue. One wonders if ever there was a time since independence that an Administration in Barbados has acted in such a deliberately shady manner but again it is meant to cause confusion.

What is significant to note is that the Private Sector too is confused. However, what occurred over the last weekend in which the government’s move of political expediency not to make vaccines mandatory should be a wake- up call for those businessmen in that sector. They have a clear case of nearsightedness; they can only see what is right in front of their noses.

In particular, the voice of the private sector has not been heard in the debate about the Republic so no one knows what they envision but it cannot be business as usual.

In the scope of things, unvaccinated workers do not pose as great a threat as China. Perhaps if the Private Sector can envision a scenario in which Barbados is unable to repay China, that China takes over the ports and then raise duties on all imports except from China, it would remove the biblical beam from their eyes.

If there is another move of political expediency that involves China, its products or government contracts, the private Sector, will be on the losing end as China does not hand out debt to settle for scraps.

With only 166 square miles and limited manufacturing, one does not envision the survival of local manufacturing as Chinese investments begin to roll out. Those lucrative government contracts will become a thing of the past. Ultimately with billions of Chinese yens at their disposal the present Administration will not need the private sector to fund their election campaigns.

The ordinary people in Barbados do not have anything to lose but that is not so with the private sector.

The private sector has a choice to make. It is either:

  1. Stand idly by as the fire breathing dragon approaches and watch Rome burn. Or,
  2. Act like they are concerned citizens of Barbados and press for transparency and involvement for all the people of Barbados in the process to becoming a Republic which ultimately benefits them.

One kept hearing for weeks on end that the government had been doing an assessment of the housing stock that had been damaged or destroyed in the freak storm, to the point where one really had to wonder what was going on, only to find out in the newspaper a few days ago that the government is purchasing emergency housing from China. Surely this is a sign of things to come. Especially with unemployment so high in Barbados, this should never happen.

There is a connection between the method that the current Administration has chosen to become a Republic and China. As this unfolds, it appears that neither the public nor the private sector will benefit when Barbados becomes a Republic if all of this has been devised to hide China’s impending control over Barbados by placing it in its debt trap. The Chinese debt trap is a pattern that is being rolled out across the globe. They loan countries billions of dollars that they know they will never be able to repay. When the debt is called the Chinese exhibit their love for ports and utility companies.

In confusion, planned or unplanned, the brain does not think clearly, and someone always benefits. Should Barbadians continue to blindly accept what is going on with the pending Republic?

182 responses to “A Heather Cole Column – Governance by Confusion, Who Gains?”

  1. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @ac
    Why then would the GoB have decided to let them build the new Sam Lord’s?


  2. NorthernObserverAugust 30, 2021 3:57 PM

    @ac
    Why then would the GoB have decided to let them build the new Sam Lord’s?
    Xccccccccccc
    Look why are u taking the issue at hand in another direction


  3. #popcorn


  4. Wasn’t there accusations of some kinda missing money from Sam Lord’s Castle belonging to China under DLP rats qui parlent?…70???? million or something like that..it’s been so long, can’t remember exactly and the fowl Slaves were on BU dodging and deflecting around that time…

  5. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    What “other direction”? Isn’t the issue Chinese standards and your concerns about them?
    Why would the GoB permit the Chinese to build anything if their materials/methods are substandard.
    Didn’t they also build the pool/gymnasium.


  6. And Queens College.

    #popcorn


  7. NO
    How many people live 24 hrs daily in a pool a gymnasium.or a hotel or use these places for daily access for ongoing habitation
    Xxxxxxxx
    Next


  8. This is what you would get in the UK for 150 prefabricated houses if you were to purchase it from the manufacturer in the link below.

    Perfect 82E 933 ft² (86.67 m²)
    2-bedroom bungalow, open-plan living/dining/kitchen area, bathroom with shower, utility room, large storage cupboard, gabled roof with 22° roof pitch, decking option from living area.

    The Dan-Wood turn-key price includes interior and exterior painting and decorating, choice of fixtures and fittings, choice of flooring, tiling and sanitary ware, and technical installations (gas condensing boiler and heat recovery system).

    Photo shows building with individual changes. * Price available for a house built on the UK Mainland only. Some exclusions apply in the Northern Scotland.

    Price: £130,400 / 54,331,225.20 BBD

    https://www.dan-wood.co.uk/en/projects


  9. 19,560,000.00 GBP = 54,331,225.20 BBD

    A total of 150 UK homes.

  10. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    So you want to put them in an office building, similarly not designed for 24×7 habitation? And with a history of being a sick building. Why not pick the GoB structure in St.Thomas that has never been occupied, with no sick building syndrome history.
    And hotels so you know ARE designed for 24×7 habitation.
    And find a source which isn’t on trade show expositions. The Chinese make SO MANY products these days, we must expect some to be substandard. Same is true with many places, including the USA.
    As you say NEXT.


  11. @ NorthernObserver,
    In the UK due to the high number of shops closing on the High Streets the government has given planning permission to convert these shops into flats/accommodation. It has proven to be a disaster.

    RIP the great Lee Scratch Perry. His passing has been wildly featured in the British media as he was recognised as been a great innovator. He was revered by the English Skinheads and punk followers from way back in the seventies. Jamaican music has brought much fame to that island on an international scale. Even in the closing events of The Japanese Olympic games their was a Japanese group playing ska music!


  12. NorthernObserverAugust 30, 2021 5:56 PM

    So you want to put them in an office building, similarly not designed for 24×7 habitation? And with a history of being a sick building. Why not pick the GoB structure in St.Thomas that has never been occupied, with no sick building syndrome history.
    Xxxccccccc
    That question u should poised to govt in reference to where govt presently has determined that the Chinese preassembled buildings are the first choice to the better alternative

  13. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @ac
    Cannot pose the question, as I really don’t know exactly what they doing?
    From the duopoly the public is fed a continuing barrage of incomplete information, or worse, no information at all.

    @TLSN
    The repurposing of non residential structures to residential is not as simple a task, as it may appear at first glance. It usually requires a major gut and rebuild


  14. I sure the Minister gave a good explanation. The only thing he didn’t mention was the name of the company. If one pretends to be a columnist one should make sure one references numerous sources to ensure accuracy. I made sure I LISTENED to what was said in parliament. Clearly the “columnists” didn’t. How is the pyramid scheme doing? I hope the money ain’t pesos rather than US since yuan is yen. 🤣🤣🤣


  15. The Minister set a deadline and tried to rationale and explain away why the time frame was not possible for local craftsmen and skilled workers to accomplished
    BTW I have not heard the Minister speaking of a tendering process
    Maybe his agenda founded on time periods to accommodate the chinese had to be accomplish


  16. Many who are disappointed in the Ministers decision speaks of his failure to include the economy of Barbados and his failure not to.include barbadians with the skill and craftsmanship to build homes
    The Minister arrogance is only set aside for those who belive that their intellect cannot be matched by others


  17. The only song left is to blame Covid for everything, all the FRAUDS are on their way OUT……..PERMANENTLY…


  18. yes, we get it, that’s why house negros are being told their true identities…as TRAITORS….which has nothing to do with real African ancestry or our ancestors…

    https://scontent.fbgi3-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t1.6435-9/240823607_131107632572122_4630485905393594715_n.jpg?_nc_cat=101&ccb=1-5&_nc_sid=8bfeb9&_nc_ohc=97eq4WBs8BsAX_I02Qc&_nc_ht=scontent.fbgi3-1.fna&oh=0a3c4f742244b517408ffd766fd8429c&oe=6151FD27


  19. Has the Minister make known the prices of those houses


  20. Dr Duguid said: “When we [went] to sourcing from EastWest, which is a company not registered in Barbados but providing houses already designed out of China, it is because we had to jumpstart [construction].

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/08/31/duguid-defends-chinabuilt-emergency-houses/




  21. Wood Too Expensive? Frame With Steel


  22. Frauds can be identified anywhere they go, creatives in Africa have been successfully building low cost housing, these criminals in Barbados are now pretending a connection but looking to China for solutions..

    https://dai.ly/x83daca


  23. And got the frigging nerve to be climbing up on the world stage soapbox talking SHITE about climate change.


  24. It’s a pity so many of their victims die before seeing them locked up….but that’s always the business plan..

    https://testwp16-cdn.newsmemory.com/nationnewsads/ads/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2021/08/how-to-cook-like-a-bajan.jpeg?pas=2109010905

    “Convicted attorney Vonda Pile, already serving a sentence for theft of a client’s money, was committed to the High Court on another theft charge when she appeared in the District “A” Magistrates’ Court.

    Pile, of Madison Terrace, Deacons Farm, St Michael, and a near 30-year veteran of the legal fraternity, was ordered to stand trial on a charge of stealing $205 481, between January 11, 2007, and March 16, 2011, being the proceeds of a Royal Bank of Canada cheque payable to Patricia Hall.”


  25. Hope they throw the book at these 3 vicious criminals, we can only guess how many years they exported guns to Barbados and caused deaths and injury…

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2021/09/03/two-metro-atlanta-men-plead-guilty-to-smuggling-30-guns-into-barbados/

    “SOURCE: The Atlanta Journal- Constitution – Three men, including two from metro Atlanta, have pleaded guilty to smuggling at least 30 guns from the United States to Barbados.

    Rashad Sargeant, 27, of College Park, pleaded guilty Thursday to unlawfully exporting firearms, acting U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia Kurt Erskine said in a news release.

    Sargeant’s co-defendant, 31-year-old David Johnson of Belleville, Illinois, pleaded guilty more than a month earlier on July 22, Erskine said. A third man who acted as a “straw purchaser” to buy guns from federally licensed firearms dealers, 28-year-old Shunquez Stephens of Flowery Branch, pleaded guilty to his role in the scheme June 21.

    According to the U.S. Attorney’s case presented in court, Johnson would recruit gun buyers like Stephens to illegally purchase firearms with no intention of keeping the guns for themselves. Sargeant and Johnson would take the guns, remove the serial numbers, then mail them to Barbados using fake identities. They shipped the guns hidden inside false compartments in boxes using common carriers like UPS, FedEx and DHL.

    “Firearms illegally exported from the United States often end up in the wrong hands and are used to commit further criminal acts,” said Ariel Joshua Leinwand, a special agent of the Bureau of Industry and Security’s Office of Export Enforcement in Atlanta.”


  26. Gone are the good old days when stories fell off a truck , but we still have Hants.

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