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Submitted by Observing

So far for the year we have had a general election, back to school discussions and a few others in the thought space. Over the years from following BU and local print media it became obvious that certain topics generate an abundance of discussion, while others don’t.

Don’t get me wrong, to each his/her/their own, but, if we truly say we want to be a part of the discussion and debate, why is it that on matters of national importance (e.g. Food security or tertiary education) we get crickets…while on others like Rihanna’s belly or a Minister’s outside child or woman or man we have a spike in interest?

The ole Rum Shops were famous for men and women being willing to talk openly about anything even if they knew nothing about it. Distilled in those spirits and conversations were sparks of ideas and thoughts that could easily hold their own in any Parliament. But where has our national discourse gone?

We have a detached generation coming up, who, for the most part don’t care about civics, politics or politricks. They have enthusiasm and skills, but the environment doesn’t develop them.

Are we afraid to speak out? Are we being filtered? Is the media overly selective in what it covers or projects? Have we become apathetic and disengaged as has been suggested here?

Oh for the days of the figurative rum shop, where we could speak, argue, debate, learn, be wrong and strong and still return home as one family or community.

So, my question to the BU family is this. What matters most to you right now? What’s your opinion? What should we as a nation be discussing and debating? Let’s agree to disagree, let the comments flow and let’s rebuild the strength of conversation and communication on all things Bajan and Bajan developmental.

Hopefully those that have ears to hear will hear, and those that are worried about taking the lead will be empowered to hold the reins and ride. If they don’t…oh well. We can still drink Bush Tea, be Critical Analysers without being Johnnies until we have had Enuff of the Pedantic Dribbling and, whether our neighbours are Donnas, Walters, Williams, Angelas or Trons, we can put our Hants to the plough and enjoy a cold Miller beer afterwards while saying Cuhdear Bajans, leh we do better nuh.

Thank God (or the Creator) for this BU space.

Walk good ya hear!


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198 responses to “What Matters to You???”

  1. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    See….nothing new, as William said, it has all been done before, or tried before, wood, jewelry,, the only thing different don’t think they tried the large scale tourism angle before, this one evolved from a project someone else has for Guyana including fisheries, oil exploration, this and that because those players have much more experience, and if they combine everything, it will be good for the Caribbean as a collective..


  2. William Skinner February 19, 2022 1:29 PM #: “Stop the nonsense! Please, The brain drain did not originate in Guyana. You need to go and do some research.”

    @ Mr. Skinner

    No, sir. YOU are the person who is “dead wrong.”

    Perhaps in your haste to dismiss David’s comments as nonsense and judge him harshly in the process, which seems to be a continuation of a normal ‘past time’ for certain contributors, you did not take the time to READ and UNDERSTAND what he actually ‘said.’ And, I believe it’s unfair to the guy, especially if one takes into consideration that you sometimes conveniently ignore uninformed comments from your favourite contributors or ‘side track’ nonsense they spew.

    David NEVER ‘said’ “the brain drain ORIGINATED in Guyana.

    What he said was, “Guyana is a country mired in racial and ethnic conflict,” which, I’m sure you will agree, is TRUE.
    I remember watching a documentary on Guyana in which Indian-Guyanese referred to African-Guyanese as ‘lazy dogs.’
    Racial and ethic tensions have contributed significantly to the fractured political state that country. The majority of Guyanese vote along ethnic lines

    His argument also is that the racial conflict severely impacted how Guyana managed and developed its resources.
    What happened to the country’s bauxite, gold, diamond lumber, rice and sugar industries, for example? During the 1970s, Guyana was known to be the one of the world’s leading suppliers of bauxite.

    Those factors, in addition to limited resources, weak infrastructure and other socio-economic problems, low salaries and lack of opportunities resulted in skilled and educated Guyanese migrating to other countries in search of better opp


  3. You are correct, reminiscent of a former minister floating a plan to collect $10.00 from every Bajan to refurbish the National Stadium. Another issue Observing we have not taken seriously, developing a youth program complete with adequate infrastructure.

    https://barbadosunderground.net/2017/04/08/national-stadium-stephen-lashley-10-dollars/amp/


  4. @William

    YOU need to stop the nonsense, the Guyanese left their country in droves, in fact it was a policy of the then Jagdeo government to encourage it. All of the Caribbean islands were flooded with Guyanese immigrants. Besides the immigration many many blogs were posted to BU which highlighted atrocities, escalating racial tensions etc. it was not a climate that encouraged investment or bilateral arrangements to support investment. The blogmaster will stop here because by your admission your mindset is grounded in the 60s, the blogmaster’s is of more recent vintage.


  5. @Artax

    If William and his supporting band of parrots had to visit Guyana in the 90s and 2000s to do business they would be of a different perspective.

  6. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Actually, i was in Guyana in the 90s..


  7. As usual, I am confused.
    When you say “you are correct” was that a response to AC?
    About time
    https://youtu.be/xtolv9kM1qk
    😃


  8. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved February 19, 2022 2:28 PM #: “blah, blah, blah….BU already got diggers….i don’t stoop that low…why would i got scavenging for your comments…”

    BU….. such an amazing forum….. and predictable.

    A few days ago I made the following comments to another thread.

    “What amazes me is, there are certain contributors who, when it suits their particular purpose, often REFER to BU’s archives as source from which information to SUBSTANTIATE any comment they made on a particular issue, could be retrieved.”

    “Unfortunately, ‘on the other hand,’ using BU’s archives suddenly becomes a ‘heinous crime,’ when information is retrieved there from that PROVES those same individuals ACTUALLY made comments they SUBSEQUENTLY DENIED making.”

    ‘Lo and behold,’ yesterday, WARU posted the following comment.

    “That’s why i don’t get the people on BU….my case was no secret, and when i got REALLY PISSED OFF….was NOT SHY to SOUND OFF….on everyone i saw as trying to victimize me, so i have no clue what game these are playing now, pretending that no one knows EXACTLY WHAT IS WHAT, not those pretending they know and don’t;;;;…..the ARCHIVE is choc-a-bloc..”

    “Chock-a-Block” definition: 1. If a place is chock-a-block, it is very full of people or things: 2. The streets were chock-a-block (with cars).

    What the lady is essentially saying is, the archives is ‘chock-a-block’ with information. Hence, it CONVENIENTLY becomes IMPORTANT, when it suits her particular purpose.

    And now she has been referred there to, she does not “stoop that low.”


  9. Seems as if Guyana is pushing a plan by which it can increase and increase its economic prospects
    Barbados being the market by which to do so

  10. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    It’s well known that the politicians/governments …like in Barbados and most other jurisdictions, are the major problem, with their INBRED ignorance backwardness and racist practices…..the ugliness in all of this is that those who keep those learned destructive, ANTISOCIAL behaviors alive in the country, like those they keep it alive for, are not even indigenous to the region….but it has poisoned the social environment in Guyana totally….don’t think that will ever see reversal…


  11. Wondering how many parrots are in AC band…
    Now recruiting.


  12. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved February 19, 2022 2:54 PM #: “Actually, i was in Guyana in the 90s..”

    Hmmmm…

    Why didn’t that surprised me?


  13. Gotta go. I have stayed too long. When I start having fun, it is time to make an exit..

  14. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    I write…therefore no need to go digging for other people’s comments, to parade around and then what….prove nothing….make myself look foolish…

    can get a whole article written in that timespan that are MY WORDS….no need to pimp for other people’s words,

    all i do is. post MY WRITINGS across continents and do something useful….am very economical with my time….hate wasting any of it….unless ya are a Pacha, and i can count those on one hand on BU……..ya words don’t interest me…


  15. My hero/heroine has arrived.

    Now in a quandary
    Should I leave or wait for her poetry
    Words of politics almost lyrical
    To the trained mind…. seeming musical
    Leave now and abandon the main course
    I spent my day listening to what is worse
    Strike up the band Angela
    Notes with melody of a harmonica
    Lift the level of the conversation
    I will get giddy at that elevation
    Strike up the band Angela
    Let BU see how you set the agenda

    Wow.. impressed myself


  16. Did I just paint a bullseye on AC back.
    Don’t be so serious.

  17. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    ya words don’t interest me…not enuff for me to go digging for them anyway, i read what i want to read, most times, especially these days, i find myself scrolling..if i see something interesting, i ask permission to use it…

    As Theo and Bushman said, Angela is making more and more sense these days….kudos to her…


  18. My thinking of any agreement coming out of Guyana would be in my opinion based on oil placing a 10 year cap on price of purchases which Barbados would buy
    Then another agreement made after the 10 year agreement ends
    Anything else now being sold as good news does not impress me
    Especially now it looks as if Guyana has set the ground rules and Barbados govt has nod in agreement

  19. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Angela’s writing has improved significantly, she deserves her credits…..that is hard work to reach that level…impressive and constructive…

    “not surprise”, like you know something about me and why i was there…, too damn presumptous…


  20. Does Guyana refine oil?


  21. DavidFebruary 19, 2022 3:36 PM

    Does Guyana refine oil
    Xccx
    Have u ever heard the word influence
    Then look it up
    It goes a long way in solving problems and building relationships


  22. Cease and desist
    AC©®
    Please note the use of the copyright and trademark symbol. Use now require prior authorization.
    1) Submit your post to the blog master for my review and approval prior to use
    2) He will then forward your post to me
    3) I will give conditional or full approval within 2 business days. Conditional approval means you must edit your post and submit again.
    4) on approval, your post to BU must be identical to what was reviewed.

    Sorry for any inconvenience caused.

  23. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Skinner, to the Blogmaster’s point : are you not overly romanticizing this Guyana story; can you truly compare the movement of folks out of that nation to Bim?…. You are much more read on regional history than that, sir. You absolutely know that the blogmaster’s analysis of the problems of racial strife during the Burnham and Jagan eras and then later with Jagdeo is definitely one he can “take […] outside of the corridors of BU”.

    We can disagree on the reasons for the strife and what was appropriate or not but to dispute the basic facts that it was significant and ripped asunder the nation once described as the ‘bread basket’ of the region would be intellectual negligence! We must accept that in Guyana, Jamaica and too in TnT there were massive political fractures around race and violent political tribalism … at levels never experienced in Bim . As the doc would say, that’s a fact that cant be denied.

    So I would respectfully disagree with you that 1) the talk of Guyana’s strife is a nonsense or that “Barbados has suffered just as much as Guyana or any other country in the region as a result of investing a third of our GDP in education only to see it head elsewhere.”

    On the matter of the actual brain drain … Why do we see that as a BAD thing. To be clichéd and simplistic: when one door closes that allows one to look to open another!

    For all practical purposes, ‘moving on up’ is not that big a deal for small communities as it should be expected and even encouraged as a means to expand the nation’s outreach and ‘influence’… Furthermore, I would offer that for every brain that was drained away there was some measurable benefit flowing back to the homeland in 90% or more of times.

    Surely, those who emigrated invariably a) provided income to their relatives (and local economy) which otherwise would never have been possible; b) created opportunities for others like themselves in their adopted homelands; and c) left roles in their homeland that others developed skills to fill.

    Bim and all our regional neighbors have benefitted tremendously from the emigration of intelligent sons and daughters … The educational $$ investment has proved its value times over; could other educational avenues have been better explored? Absolutely … yet, that does NOT disparage or detract from the benefits accrued to date!


  24. @ David,
    OFF MESSAGE
    Yesterday in the UK we experienced a momentous storm. Here is an extraordinary live stream from yesterday at Heathrow Airport. One of the busiest airport in the world.

    https://youtu.be/vPQh1FrbOc0?t=11994


  25. @Dee Word

    And you are sufficiently well read to know the reference to brain drain is pejorative.


  26. On the matter of the actual brain drain … Why do we see that as a BAD thing.

    WELL IT IS BAD WHEN THOSE WHO HAVE MADE A STELLAR CONTRIBUTION IN THE PASS, OR WERE ABLE TO DO SO IN THE PRESENT OR FUTURE, ARE REMOVED FROM THE FRAY LOCALLY. MANY NAMES COME TO MIND, IN MY FIELD ALONE

    IT IS VERY GOOD FOR THOSE WHO ARE NOT THAT STELLAR, AND WHO AS HEWERS OF WOOD AND DRAWERS OF WATER COULD REMIT MONEY BACK HOME, AS MANY DO.

    WHAT IS REQUIRED IS BOTH.

    WHEN COVID STRUCK, THERE WAS NOT ONE DR IN BARBADOS TO TRY TO MAKE A STAND TO MIA. AS THE YOUNG DR DID IN 1985 WHEN BAMP AND TOM WAS AT WAR. LOOK AT THE RESULT OF THE STAND TAKEN THEN, HELPED OF COURSE LARGELY BY TOM’S DEATH.

    SKINNER HAS SAID A LOT OF THINGS OF MUCH MERIT, BECAUSE HE HAS THE GUTS TO STAND ALONE IF REQUIRED. MOST WHO COME HERE ARE APPRIMATORS OF LABIAE ORAE TO ADIPOSE TISSUE OVERLAYING SOME ONE’S GLUTEI.
    – A WELL ESTABLISHED BAJAN PASSTIME, WHICH I HAVE NEVER EMBRACED


  27. Keith Hudson, Horace Andy & Earl Flute

    poor people


  28. HOW DOES A BARBADOS SCHOLAR BECOME A PARROT BECAUSE HE AGRRES WITH SKINNER ABOUT ANYTHING, WHEN SKINNER MAKES A LOT OF SENSE ABOUT MOST THINGS
    SKINNER STANDS OUT HIGH ABOVE THE MORONS THAT POST HERE ON A DAILY BASIS ALTHOUGH HE MAY NOT BE PART OF THE CLIQUES?


  29. Not as upbeat about the brain drain as some are. One of the reason for the US dominance is that it has attracted the best brains from a wide variety of nations.

    China emergence is also based on the fact that many Chinese after schooling in the US return to their homeland.

    A small island like ours cannot always export it brains and wait for remittances. Having the best brains fill vacancies should be the national policy. We need to figure out how to keep and reward some of our talented folks. Nepotism, cronyism and favoritism is not the answer to the brain drain.


  30. Nepotism, cronyism and favoritism is not the answer to Bu although the “brain drain” would explain the mind numbing sub par level of comments and the throw a shade crew have bad brains too.


  31. @ DPD
    I know what I replied to. I simply stated that the term “ brain drain” did not originate in Guyana That is pure hog wash!
    I then went on to say that the brain drain affected all the Caribbean islands in much the same way.
    You are now talking about a whole lot of issues that did not occur in the blogmaster’s post to which I referred.
    I dont know how speaking the truth is romanticizing anything.
    I would politely suggest that you read the exact post by the blogmaster to which I responded.
    And I am standing by my position that when all the factors are considered all the islands suffered in the same way.
    The Blogmaster wrote nonsense and I called him on it .
    You know full well that the term brain drain did not originate in Guyana.

  32. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @David, that’s true re the pejorative nature of the term ‘brain drain’ …I simply went with the term as used … but the point still stands: movement of intelligent and ambitious folks from small communities is a natural occurrence. There are many upsides … we need not focus on the negatives.

    And @Doc: of course @Skinner speaks his truth unapologetically … as many others do.

    I am always amused at this ‘clique’ commentary as I am yet to see that manifested here with any impact.
    Groups do appear to agree seemingly en masse on certain subjects and surprisingly you sir fall squarely into one of those groups on matters of ‘right wing political narratives’…. just as I may be linked to those who agree on matters of certain left-leaning narratives.

    Beyond those generalities, I have disagreed herein with the Blogmaster (often) and several others and have seen similiar moments of disagreement between others who may have otherwise agreed; so frankly really not sure where or when the cliques meet here online and affix their virtual oral labiae to that central tissue ‘hole-ing’ out between the glutes!

    I gone.


  33. @Dee Word

    Migration of labour is not unique to Barbados, Guyana or any other country but a balance must be maintained. This balance is linked to the way a country manages its affairs economic and otherwise.


  34. @ David, @ DpD @ Artax
    David said: “ Guyana is a country mired in racial and ethnic conflict. This has severely impacted how Guyana developed its resources in recent history. In fact it was responsible for aggressive emigration known as ‘brain drain’. We love to romanticize some issues.“

    I have reread the post as bd apologies are sincerely offered. I interpreted it much too literally. I actually wax positing that @ David had said the term “ brain drain” originated in Guyana.
    Sincere apologies to @ David@ DpD and Artax.
    Peace.


  35. Typos : as bd =‘and apologies
    Typo: wax = was

  36. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    William…looks like ya will get that new constitution in at least 18 months or so, they are getting helping drafting it…

    “One of the reason for the US dominance is that it has attracted the best brains from a wide variety of nations.”

    people tend to go where opportunity knocks, if the Caribbean would CREATE OPPORTUNITIES…they will also get those attracted to what is there to offer in a reverse brain drain, but if you consisitently for 6 DECADES offer your people nothing but poverty, misery, racism, oppression, low wages, a slavery environment and discrimination as a steady diet….they WILL LEAVE….

    “Does Guyana refine oil”

    i believe from what i read last year, they are also being offered expertise in this..

  37. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    getting help.

  38. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Thank you brother @Skinner, you had me kerfuffled, perplexed and discombobulated all in one when you asked about “@David had said the term “ brain drain” originated in Guyana”😎…. Why would we seriously debate where the term ‘originated’ .. so I never considered that… rather I explored the issues, reasons and impact of that ‘brain drain’.

    I believe that the actual debate itself is still badly premised because it’s IMPOSSIBLE `to restrict the movement and development of ambitious, bright folks within the confines of this 166 Sq miles jurisdiction… IMPOSSIBLE, IMPRACTICAL AND UNREALISTIC…. Let me use the remarks from @Mr. TheoGazerts to try to illustrate this as briefly as possible. He said: “A small island like ours cannot always export it brains and wait for remittances. Having the best brains […] should be the national policy.”

    First up, no one is ‘waiting for remittances’. That’s a fact of life that just as our kin remitted during work on the Canal it’s a NATURAL part of life…So let’s move that to the side.

    Currently, we have ONE university college and realistically have the capacity (funding etc) for just that one; possibly two if we really stretch. WHERE would we have placed many of the top academics coming out of our schools over the years? .. Similar questions can be posed re our bright doctors, engineers, technical experts, business entrepreneurs and so on. To be specific… After an Errol Barrow leaves Cawmere and then HC to become the ‘best that he could be’ and finally be the boss man to which all roads led … what space at top was there for suitably ambitious and bright colleagues ! Or on the other hand, were we worst served that the tenure of Sir George Alleyne former PAHO head and UWI Chancellor was not completed entirely in Bim??

    No need to be prolix … my point is simply that as much as we ABSOLUTELY will try to keep and reward our best and brightest we would have been PRACTICALLY limited in doing that.

    So let’s be realistic in our assessments of ‘brain drain’. There WILL BE circumstances likes those of @Doc GP where interpersonal conflicts cause emigration … that’s life! There will be circumstances where 2 or 3 students gets all A’s at Advanced Level in same year and graduate with high honours years later …. and consider if they were the second or third cohort in five years or so showing that exceptional talent … pray tell where will we place them all as they mature and spread their talents and ambitions to lead????

    Exporting talents is also a marketable and practical ploy … for a small nation that should be sought-after as a competitive niche advantage. Now, of course, as the world moves more steadfastly into wireless work across boundaries we can now likely ’employ’ more of that talent on island.

    We are not the US or China so we need to continue to seek OUR competitive advantages and NOT focus on theirs!


  39. @ WURA
    The constitution issue is an embarrassment. A rush for reasons still unknown. It’s impossible to understand some of the reasons: how and why some things are done .

  40. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    TLSN…great show, i actually waited to see if the Qatar A380 airline made it in on the 3rd try, the pilot nailed it, what a landing….that plane is humongous..

  41. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    William……but you see who they are looking to for help….says a lot that they cannot draft a constitution themselves and the place is infested with lawyers who love nothing more than to boast about how great they are……..and numerous republic templates everywhere, even in the region, to choose from….they are so not impressive…..don’t know why they bother to pretend to be leaders…..just give it up and let others get a shot at genuinely maintaining and managing the island better…


  42. @African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved February 19, 2022 7:31 PM
    “don’t know why they bother to pretend to be leaders…just give it up and let others get a shot at genuinely maintaining and managing the island better…”

    But there was a wide open election on January 19th. Plenty of time for “others [to] get a shot at genuinely maintaining and managing the island better.”

    And yet YOUR others did not step forward.

    Can you please explain why?


  43. @David
    ” Another issue Observing we have not taken seriously, developing a youth program complete with adequate infrastructure.”

    After 2-3 youth policies I guess they realise that it doesn’t take much to “get votes!”

    @Williams
    “The constitution issue is an embarrassment”
    True, and one that Madame Justice will dismiss out of hand if all goes according to plan.

    Loving the ideas and discussion here though… Almost makes good material for a BU Manifesto. The Guyana economic boom and ensuing national development (or not) will be interesting to watch

    Just observing


  44. @ DPD
    All I ever owned is my intellect therefore respect is due. I take this forum very seriously. Thanks for accepting my apology.
    I think the positions taken by you and @ Theo, re: the brain drain must be the best reasons for dumping the overseas / us /them , commentary.
    Sometimes, we lose sight of some truths , when we establish imagined boundaries in relation to ourselves.
    One of the greatest myths perpetuated here on BU , is that those who leave become less Barbadian. Far from , we often marvel and are proud to explain how great the rock is and the resilience of the people; attributes that some who never leave Bim , either don’t know or have not experienced .
    The brain drain is actually testimony that we were so well prepared , that we could make it anywhere.
    I once , in a presentation , to some American undergrads , told them , that the “brightest” and richest are academically judged by their ability to get into the top public schools.
    I was asked if I were a graduate of the more prestigious grammar school. I told them I could not pass the exam so I went to a private school that was considered inferior to the public schools.
    They were stunned !
    We have to deal with our uniqueness better. Some of us may be shocked to learn that the great grandchild of a Barbadian, born “ overseas “ , who has never been to Barbados knows more about our culture than a child born and living on the rock.
    Never underestimate our African oral tradition of story telling.
    Peace and once more , thank you for your gracious acceptance of my apology,


  45. @African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved February 18, 2022 3:00 PM
    “…diplomats are involved in BIG SCANDAL and got recalled…”

    Actually NO GOVERNMENT ANYWHERE should recall a diplomat who is involved in a “big scandal” Instead the government should revoke the diplomatic immunity of the diplomat…and let the former diplomat take his or her lashes in the jurisdiction in which he or she was serving, or maybe I should say self serving.

    Governments should not use the Vienna Convention to shield bad behavior.


  46. What are the grounds for the revocation of diplomatic immunity?

    It is possible for the official’s HOME COUNTRY to WAIVE IMMUNITY; this tends to happen only when the individual has committed A SERIOUS CRIME UNCONNECTED WITH THEIR DIPLOMATIC ROLE (as opposed to, for example, allegations of spying), or has witnessed such a crime.


  47. 329.5 million Vs 287,371

    US has best and worst branes
    BD has a much smaller pool


  48. That is fine William, they blogmaster is aware of your passion as a regionalist.


  49. @ David
    Thanks for accepting my apology. Your reasoning was correct.
    Let’s hope that we can finally get some movement with Guyana. Mottley is doing the right thing.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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