Submitted by Bentley

I’m sure you must have seen this article from GIS (see below).

While I totally agree with the need to address food security by regional leaders much more is needed to be done if we are to ever come close to satisfying the food requirements of the region from regional sources. With specific reference to Barbados there are several areas that we need to urgently address. These include:

  1. Getting an effective praedial larceny act in place,
  2. Giving meaningful incentives to small farmers,
  3. Work towards removing the stigma associated with farming and agricultural work,
  4. Allow would be small food crop farmers to have a real stake in the sector (provision of unused parcels of government land at viable concessions, revive the agricultural seed store with a wide variety of viable seeds),
  5. Put conditions in place to control crop pests especially monkeys. I’m sure there are several other factors you can think of.

Food security and food crop farming must be seen as important by every member of society and government must do all it can to ensure this is achieved. 

I remember the late Dr Keith Laurie saying that during the second world war Barbados was able to feed itself since no food was coming in from outside. There is no good reason why we can’t achieve this on a Caricom wide basis.

See GIS article referred to by Bentley


It’s Time To Secure Region’s Food Security

BY JULIE CARRINGTON | MAY 20, 2022 | TOP STORIES

Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley addressing the the opening ceremony of the three-day Agri-Investment Forum and Exhibition in Guyana, while regional leaders and officials look on. (PMO)

Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley has used the platform of a major agriculture conference to make a strident call for regional heads to join together to ensure the region’s food security.

She made the call yesterday during the opening ceremony of the three-day Agri-Investment Forum and Exhibition in Guyana, as she spoke on the topic: Pursuing CSME and Removing Barriers to Enhancing Agri-Trade Within the Region.

Ms. Mottley told the large gathering that the ongoing crisis with Russia and Ukraine had reinforced the vulnerabilities of the millions of people living in the Caribbean, based on the effect of wheat and other food restrictions in place by some overseas countries which export wheat and its by-products.

The Prime Minister shared that Russia, the Ukraine and India had stopped sending important food and grocery items outside its borders, and warned of more restrictions to follow by governments to safeguard their food supplies in the face of soaring inflation.

She articulated the view that the entire Caribbean region had to be viewed not just in the context of the population in CARICOM of 18 million people, but also the visitors received on an annual basis, whose “responsibility is ours to feed”.

Ms. Mottley affirmed: “We are at that moment in time when it is up to us to stand up to the challenge or to recognise that the consequences of it will indeed be difficult and potentially devastating for our people. While we await the global initiatives to be announced by the UN Secretary General and the global crisis response team he has established on food, energy and financing with the expectation that what the world faces will be more challenging than what we faced in 2008 to 2010. We have a responsibility to take preemptive action in this region to protect our people.”

The Prime Minister and other regional heads also made a case for more regular transportation of goods across the region with the suggestion that a new solution be found to move the cargo.

“In this moment, when maritime transport is at its greatest challenge, we have to recognise that the bridge to resuscitating Caribbean tourism air transport may well be having regional air cargo moving to help offset the investment to move our people,” she emphasised. 

Ms. Mottley continued: “We may need to look at different planes and we may need to look at more regular traffic. The regularity of movement may well be the solution for us rather than these large aircrafts that move once or twice a day.”

The three-day event was held under the themeInvesting in Vision 25 by 2025, which represents the goal to lower the region’s US $6 billion food import bill by 25 per cent within the next three years.

julie.carrington@barbados.gov.bb

172 responses to “What Can be More Important than…”


  1. Another link from Bentley.

    https://youtu.be/Z_yFuVnL0us


  2. Barbados, Guyana seek closer economic bond
    Barbados and Guyana are seeking to establish a relationship that could be used as a developmental model to transform the Caribbean.
    Yesterday during the opening ceremony of Agrofest held at Queen’s Park, The City, President of Guyana Dr M. Irfaan Ali said the type of collaboration both countries needed to tackle security threats would require unification and innovation.
    In order for this plan to work, Ali said Barbadians and Guyanese could no longer see themselves as competitors but “as a singular collective”.
    “The relationship that we are building between Guyana and Barbados is to bring economic prosperity to both countries. We are not looking at winning in one area or creating a situation where we are carving out an area for you and an area for Guyana. That is not what we want. We want a holistic approach to this relationship so that we create economic prosperity in every sector and in everything that we do together as one country, Guyana and Barbados,” he said.
    “This relationship must advance security and we’re not talking security in a narrow sense of physical security . . . For the security we are talking about in the Guyana/ Barbados CARICOM model, how do we ensure that our people and our countries remain secure under the environmental threats and the threats of climate change? How do we remain viable and secure under the threats of food security?
    “. . . That security and this economic expansion and cooperation I speak of must be built also on a platform of respect and fairness . . . I have seen tremendous change and improvement in the relationship on the level of the private sector and this is what is needed – people to people contact, people to people integration; people to people partnership is what is going to cement this this relationship moving forward.”
    Addressing the international supply chain issues and international conflict, which have created a rise in production costs for farmers and exacerbated many of the region’s food insecurities, Ali said the Barbados/Guyana relationship would not only see the development of Barbados Black Belly Sheep and an improvement in transportation between the two countries, but would also create opportunities in agriculture for the disabled community, single parent women and young people.
    He said Guyana was working with developmental partners to move limestone to that state, so Guyana could produce the raw materials needed to make livestock feed and trade with Barbados at a cheap cost.
    Ali also said Barbados and Guyana were also “twinning” their economies in the area of tourism.
    He said plans were in the works to establish a link between Barbados and northern Brazil so
    Barbados could have access to millions of people in a new market, adding that the Barbados Tourism Authority would be setting up an office in one of Guyana’s consulate offices to make this a reality.
    Working together
    “We are working on merging our tourism product and we are working towards operational efficiency and cost efficiency by marketing jointly Guyana and Barbados as a singular brand.
    “In markets that we are in, we will market Barbados; in markets that you are in you will market Guyana. We are looking at creating a winning formula for both Guyana and Barbados.”
    Building on the need for a deeper relationship to combat the security threats small states face, Prime Minister Mia Mottley said: “We believe that we are standing on a strong platform and that it is time now for us to move to the next level, especially as we face these multiple challenges that have confronted us over the course of the last two years.”
    Mottley also spoke about the opportunities for Barbados in the construction sector that would be realised from this relationship. She said Guyana had “excellent” hardwood and this would be used to start a “silent revolution” in housing, which would see people living below the poverty line having better access to living accommodation.
    Other members from the Guyanese contingent visiting Barbados who attended the ceremony included Minister of Tourism, Industry and Commerce Oneidge Walrond and Minister of Agriculture Zulfikar Mustapha. Minister of Agriculture, Forestry, Fisheries, Rural Transformation and Labour from St Vincent and the Grenadines Saboto Caeser was also at the event, as well as representative and country director of the United Nation’s World Food Programme Regis Chapman.
    Members of Barbados’ Parliament and Cabinet, the Barbados Agricultural Society and stakeholders in the agriculture sector were also in attendance.
    (SB)

    Source: Nation


  3. UWI students’ research key in push for financial technology hub
    Barbados’ aim to become the leading Caribbean Financial Technology hub by 2032 could benefit from the recommendations of University of the West Indies (UWI) Cave Hill students.
    A week-long challenge labelled Classroom To Boardroom 2022 has been sponsored by Massy Barbados. It involved students working in several research areas, the organisers reported during a media webinar yesterday.
    Co-chief executive officer Leandra Forde said education, public awareness and marketing to local and overseas investors was given prominence by teams that brought together 20 students.
    Jeremy Nurse, vice president of corporate strategy and transactions for Massy Barbados, said unlike past initiatives, his company’s involvement as a sponsor was to contribute to a project which would, “have an impact on the country as a whole”.
    Among the proposals outlined by Forde was FinTech training for school teachers, introduction of FinTech in the school system and enhancement of the Barbados Export website to attract foreign investor.
    Executive chairman of Barbados Entrepreneurship
    Foundation (BEF) Celeste Foster expressed optimism that the recommendations by the students would be implemented.
    “This is the biggest programme that we have ever run,” Foster noted. She joined other partners in complimenting the students on the work and said they had “come up with a road map for Barbados”.
    Chairman of the Financial Services Commission, Oliver Jordan, said Government’s recently appointed FinTech Advisory Committee would be meeting shortly.
    “A lot of changes are coming,” he said, adding while consumer protection would be taken into account, innovation would also encouraged.
    Students gave their perspectives on the challenge and all indicated they had benefited from it.
    “Programmes like these are very important, especially at UWI,” Kyle Connell said while his colleague Zachary Hoyte said, “I totally enjoyed it.”
    Meantime Ricquan Blackman-Jessamy said: “This has been an experience, to say the least. You never get pushed as hard.” (HH)

    Source: Nation


  4. LAMB GONE UP
    Sheep farmers’ group advises members to raise prices
    The price of local lamb has gone up.
    In a notice earlier this week, the Barbados Sheep Farmers’ Association told its membership to increase their prices, which will see Barbadians paying a bit more for Black Belly Sheep lamb.
    President of the association, Maurice Grant, said yesterday that a price increase was imminent due to the high cost of inputs, adding that there was no major difference between the old prices and the new ones.
    Grant said farmers were having difficulty running their businesses and the increase would help offset rising production costs.
    “The need for the change in price is basically because of the significant increase in cost and it is just not a matter of feed. Farmers have commercial vehicles and have seen an increase in diesel, a 15 per cent increase. We are also seeing an increase in the cost of hay and the issue is that in the dry season there is not enough hay to satisfy the demand. Dairy farmers are buying the bulk of it and sheep farmers are struggling to get,” he said. “The carcass price is the price we sell to wholesalers and they have been buying carcass lamb for years at $8 per pound. So we can’t continue selling lamb at $8 per pound, which is about $17 per kilo (kilogramme) and then when you go into the supermarkets you see the same lamb being sold at nearly $30 per kilo. At $17 per kilo most farmers are making a small margin on it, so there was a need for that move.
    “The price for legs moved around based on demand. They were being sold between $10 and $13. Lamb chops moved around from $10 to $12, so the price didn’t move here; and stew was sold at $8 per pound.”
    Still in talks
    Meanwhile, president of the Barbados Egg and Poultry Producers’ Association (BEPPA), Stephen Layne, and president of the Pig Farmers Association, Henderson Williams, said their respective stakeholders were still in talks with Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley about increasing their prices.
    Layne said farmers could no longer sell their offerings at a small profit margin and sooner or later something would have to give.
    “We had a meeting with the Prime Minister two days ago with an emphasis to do everything else except increase prices. I don’t know how sustainable that is but it is where we are at right now,” he said. “You can’t keep asking poultry farmers to hold strain and supermarkets are exercising their rights to have their markup percentage – that is my only concern. They must share part of the burden of keeping prices down.”
    Williams said: “We are clear in our mind that whatever we do we need to ensure that we don’t put the price beyond the reach of the consumer. We are now in the process of rejigging and relooking everything from the pricing, in terms of the inputs of the feed, to other opportunities to reduce the overall cost of production. About 75 per cent of the production cost of pork is feed.
    “Hopefully, within the next month or two, we will be able to find a solution that allows us to stabilise or implement a programme where individuals can get certain cuts, even though they may not be prime cuts, that there is a section of the pig that we can utilise at a reasonable price.”
    Williams said pig farmers were also looking at ways in which they could pool their resources and manoeuvre as a cooperative when buying or sourcing production inputs.
    He said the artificial insemination programme needed a boost, which would see an improvement in production time and sizes allowing consumers to get better cuts of meat.
    He said they would also benefit from “better prices” as there would be more availability of local pork on the market.
    His association, as well as BEPPA, are to meet with the Prime Minister again next month to determine the direction each sector takes.
    President of the Barbados Agricultural Society, Peter Chase, who is also head of the food crop production division, said it was important not to cause public panic over price increases.
    However, he said crop farmers were also having a hard time coping with production costs and, just like dairy farmers, they were underpaid in the agriculture sector.
    He said crop producers were meeting sometime next month to discuss a way forward. (SB)

    Source: Nation


  5. Always an issue, we have discussed this matter about how oil contracts have been awarded in Guyana on BU before.


    Every citizen at present owes ExxonMobil $9M – IEEFA Financial Analyst

    May 25, 2022 News


    • each new discovery,is more debt for the nation

    By Gary Eleazar

    Kaieteur News – For every US dollar that Guyana earns per barrel of oil produced in the Stabroek Block, the Oil companies walk away with six dollars.

    Compounding the situation is the fact that at present, given the developments already undertaken and underway, each citizen of this country owes the oil company some US$44,000.

    Tom Sanzillo, Director of Financial Analysis for the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis

    Additionally, at the rate Esso Exploration and Production Guyana Limited (EEPGL)—ExxonMobil Guyana—has envisaged the developments, the ones already identified would see the country repaying ExxonMobil at least US$75B to develop which would mean that the country would be repaying debts on that amount until 2070.
    This situation is likely to change, since the rapid pace of discoveries would also lead to the rapid increase in debt.

    These are among the conclusions of Tom Sanzillo, Director of Financial Analysis for the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA), who during a public webinar yesterday delved into the financial burdens Guyana has been left in as a result of the lopsided arrangement with EEPGL and the Government of Guyana under the Production Sharing Agreement. The webinar was hosted in view of the fact that the Environmental Permit for the Liza 1 Development expires next week on May 31.

    According to Sanzillo, the Guyana government through the Environmental Protection Agency(EPA)–which is the state entity responsible for renewing the permit or not—should use the situation as leverage to address the numerous shortcomings in the contract.
    He told attendees at the webinar, unless this is done, then the renewal of a permit with no additional restrictions and financial reforms would simply see the renewal process as a rubber stamp arrangement.
    The lopsided arrangement alluded to by Sanzillo is another in the long list of abuses of Guyana.
    Elaborating further, Sanzillo reminded that this year Guyana has for the first time used its oil revenue in its budget and while the leaders are touting new revenues they have not addressed the increased cost of production and the fact that each Guyanese is currently on the hook for some US$44,000, “this is what is owed now.”
    He used the occasion to posit that what each resident must pay is bad enough and that using all of the oil resources in the budget in order to fund a 37 percent increase in spending adds insult to injury. According to Sanzillo, the Guyana government is currently spending more than it is earning and reminded that the country has had to borrow billions, each year.

    The Financial Analysts used the occasion to remind that while Guyana had agreed with the International Monetary Fund to use its oil resources to achieve certain specific results such as closing the deficit and saving for the future none of this is being achieved. Instead, what the government is doing is spending more than it earns in what is already a bad deal, made worse by the poor management of the resource.

    To this end, he posited that if the government fails to change the deal it would have failed the people of Guyana. As such, he was of the view that Guyana may never see its fair share of earnings from its oil blocks and as such pressed for government to open up its books in order for the people to be able to determine the state of affairs.
    According to the IEEFA Financial Analysts, “We are not the only ones saying that this is a bad deal for Guyana” and reminded that stakeholders from around the world have been saying the same thing. With this in mind, he noted that in recent days there are regular announcements made of new discoveries and it is being seen as a positive thing.
    According to Sanzillo however, under the present arrangement every time he sees an announcement of a new discovery, to him, that just means the mountain of debt will pile up before Guyana can get more earnings from its oil fields and reminded that with US$75B to develop what is already planned, that would take until 2070 to pay back.
    With this in mind, Sanzillo said, “Our concern is that Guyana will never see the revenues it was promised.”



  6. Farmers, producers meet with PM

    Article by Emmanuel Joseph
    Published on
    May 27, 2022

    Poultry and pork farmers in Barbados are looking to Government for a final resolution that would see the removal of obstacles now preventing increased production for exportation of their products.

    Chief Executive Officer of the Barbados Agricultural Society (BAS), James Paul said Thursday that senior representatives of the Egg and Poultry Producers Association, the Pig Farmers Association and the Pig Farmers Cooperative who met with Prime Minister Mia Mottley last evening to discuss expanding production, are hoping that follow-up talks would settle the existing challenges.

    “The farmers have agreed to come back to the Prime Minister with some proposals for further discussions that would lead to the type of expansion that we want,” Paul told Barbados TODAY.

    “The discussions were basically around that and how the obstacles that prevented expansion in the sectors can be removed. They were very frank discussions. We are hoping that the follow-up discussions that we will have, whatever roadblocks that existed, would be removed,” stated the BAS boss, who was not in a position to specify the proposals to be submitted to the Government, nor a timeline for future rounds of talks.

    In acknowledging a recent decision by Heads of Government of CARICOM to see agriculture in the region expand, and for individual countries to take steps to achieve this, Paul said the local farmers have come up with some suggestions on the issue of imports which continue to be a concern to Barbadian producers. “The issue is imports. Again, I am appealing to members of the business community, not to be reckless in how they do things in terms of imports. There needs to be a level of cooperation in terms of the importation of products,” Paul argued.

    The head of the umbrella body for food and livestock farmers is heartened that the Prime Minister’s intervention shows the seriousness of the Government in seeking to rescue the agricultural sector and to address the ongoing problem of importation of products that put local growers at a competitive disadvantage.

    “We are seeing now, for instance, imports of poultry, not sanctioned by the BADMC [Barbados Agricultural Development and Marketing Corporation]. We had a code of practice before where all poultry imports had to be sanctioned by the BADMC before they are brought in. It seems as if people are side-stepping that process,” he stated.

    Paul said the current importation of pork is another matter of worry for the local farmers. He said what was also made clear at the meeting with the Prime Minister and Minister of Agriculture and Food Security Indar Weir was that local farmers needed to “step up to the plate” in light of economic and social external pressures being experienced by small developing states such as Barbados.

    “Farmers have recognised that we are going to have to step up in terms of increased production in order to provide for greater food security for Barbadians. And the Prime Minister indicated that they will do what is necessary to ensure that measures are put in place to ensure it is facilitated,” Paul pointed out.
    emmanueljoseph@barbadostoday.bb

    Source: BT


  7. I think we may be getting somewhere this time in the region wrt agriculture. I believe they are finally tired of the talk.

    This Guyanese PM is obviously grateful to Ms. Mottley for standing behind the idea that an election result is determined by the number of votes rather than the race of the voter. I have seen photos of them putting their heads together, LITERALLY.

    We have already heard Richard Hoad speak on behalf of the monkey so they ARE actually being culled. They are being culled in St. Philip also, where they have put some farmers I know out of business. Unfortunately, Richard Hoad seems to have been using them as an alarm system against people’s dogs who kill his goats. By now, I would have killed those dogs myself.

    Next must be the human pests, the praedial larcenists. Can’t kill them but I would have had traps set up for them long time. Do these farmers have no imagination? The courts should then sentence them to work without pay for the same farmer they attempted to rob.

    And speaking of law enforcement, how about setting up a dedicated praedial larceny unit as has been done in some other countries? It does not have to be large to be effective.

    Tracking systems for produce were promised so damn long! What is so hard about it?

    Why do we make EVERYTHING seem so hard??????


  8. But where is our MoA, though? Is he MIA?
    Haven’t seen him out front lately. I assume (at the usual risk) that he is working assiduously behind the scenes.

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

    The great Guyana oil scam…at least the Black Afrikan population know where they stand in all of this sleight of hand…and pauperization of those who are most helpless..


  10. @Donna

    Weir seems to be one of the more hardworking MoA. It probably has something to do with MOTTLEY playing lead (as usual) on the issue of agriculture.


  11. Can’t find the MoA? I have a friend who lives in his constituency who has had an ungoing problem and after exhausting the usual Gov’t agencies I asked him if he had contacted his MP, his response I only see him on TV. This friend admired Tom’s vision and thinks Mia saved the country, yet he can’t get in contact with the rep he voted for so he will have to watch TV
    BTW I last saw him on TV rambling about the Gov’ts efforts to combat Swine flu.


  12. @Sargeant

    Did you ask your friend why constituents were not aroused to boot Weir from office in January?


  13. Sweet talk

    ” one country, Guyana and Barbados,”

    https://www.nationnews.com/2022/05/28/barbados-guyana-seek-closer-economic-bond/


  14. PMMIA leading from the front. All roads lead to PMMIA.

    The BLP supporters are happy with their government and especially PMMIA.


  15. The old and determined canard about some perceived need for food security just would not die.

    One, Barbados never had the landmass, water resources or the ‘culture of agri’ to properly feed itself. Associated with the denial of the original intents of the Barrow, Burnham and Williams’s thinking about food within a CSME.
    Two, neoliberalism meant and means a concentration on services instead of industry. Based on the false presumption that the cheapest food can best be produced elsewhere.
    Three, people here seem to be of the general view that this condition of insecurity is created by happenstance or some innate need to be food dependent when indeed it has always been a form of warfare conducted by America to find and defend markets for its own farmers. International financial agencies like the IDB, the IMF and the World Bank actively support America’s soft power projection in this regard. So they sell us supermarkets as normal instead of agriculture, or at best cash crops if we’re lucky.
    Fourth, as members of the WTO it is virtually impossible to deny the importation of cheaper foods. And if the country does the importer or exporting country can seek a judicial remedy within the WTO system. This is what globalization means.
    Five, there has yet to be the equitable land distribution required to make food security distinct from chattel slavery in the context of Barbados. Without this, historical memory will continue to locate agriculture, wrongly, with circumstances still festering within national consciousness
    Six, the stealing Black peoples’ and poor peoples’ lands by lawyers

    And on and on. But given presence circumstances agricultural development in Barbados and the Caribbean shall remain as is for the foreseeable future..


  16. LOL
    Brass Bowls can ONLY be brass bowls!!
    Last time we had a highfaluting business deal with Guyana, there was a system called the ‘CARICOM Multilateral Clearing Facility”.
    When the fan was impacted by the usual jobby, Barbados was out in the hundreds of millions….

    Bushie is amused that we are so happily repeating history… obviously so that we can confirm the Maxim ;
    – “a brass bowl and his money are easily separated…”

    So why the Hell can’t Guyana develop their agriculture ….AND Barbados develop OUR agriculture ….while coordinating the respective areas of FOCUS and cooperation to avoid unproductive competition? When the Guyana government changes and a different attitude emerges, …What!!?? Do we just hope for the best?

    Lotta shiite!!
    This is just a lot of political rhetoric for the benefit of Enuff and Lorenzo. in the ABSENCE of any SOUND and sensible POLICY on agriculture for Barbados.
    JA’s who can’t even deal with monkeys, ridiculous imports, and crop thieves MUST find some shiite to distract the yard fowls while the Titanic is sinking.


  17. Bushie
    You should try seeing Barbados as an entity which lives forever! Sometimes.

    Now that Guyana is rich with oil accounts can be reconciled.

    Indeed, history may show that that was the best money the country “spent”.

    You are perennially misguided by an eponymy.


  18. @ Pacha
    YOU should check your facts.

    Having oil identified as a ‘national resource’ does NOT make you rich. It just makes you into a TARGET.
    The USUAL (hegemonic) SUSPECTS are the ones making the ‘killing’.
    Check out Venezuela, Nigeria, Iran and now Russia to get a glimpse into the future of those countries that are ‘blessed’ with oil.
    LOL it is just that Russia played their cards brilliantly and PRETENDED to go along with the predators …for a while – until they became too big to consume.

    Do some research and tell us how much income Guyana has made (and stands to make,) from the oil revenues extracted.


  19. Bushie

    Again you err. For this writer has personal and professional knowledge about the petroleum business.

    And although your point is too often correct it is not always so.

    In the case of Guyana they are only getting about 3 percent royalties. Plus arrangements can be made with Barbados to exchange debt for oil. A deal like that this writer engineered which saw the creditor nation receiving about 8 times the amount owed, applying the rule of 72.

    In the case of Russia deals are vastly different. In the case of Nigeria, off-OPEC production represents direct revenues to their treasury.

    These matters are very complex and are not always susceptible to your unsophisticated reasonings as based in a single book of falsehoods, we are afraid.


  20. I recently heard Ms. Mottley raising these unfair and unevenly applied WTO regulations.

    What was and is does not always have to be.


  21. Oh OK…. Let Bushie see now…
    “Bushie is ‘too often correct’ ……but in THIS case NOT SO!! ….because Pacha PERSONALLY engineered a deal which saw the creditor nation getting 8 times the amount owed…”
    Huh??
    Kindly excuse the bushman from further exploration of this minefield ..least serious and possibly irreparable damage be done to Pacha’ credibility ( in the fanatical drive to blame the Bible for all ills…)


  22. Also, what happened with Guyana last time does not have to be this time.

    Relationships change.


  23. Oh dear! Let the grass lie low! The “elephants” are fighting.


  24. The logic of an idiot…
    Next time may be different…hopefully..


  25. Bushie

    The false representation of material facts should be beneath you.

    We tried to point out some of the realities about a business which we feel certain we know better than you.

    Well, if the root of your every word is based in untruths, therefore the stems, the branches, the fruits, must thusly.

    Certainly, that’s a logic not unknown to you!😎🦔


  26. So…you marry one man and he abuses you, should you then assume that ALL MEN will abuse you and never marry again?

    Are these the same people who left us holding the empty bag last time? Seems to me that what happened was allowed to happen. Does it mean that different actors will allow it to happen again.

    YOURS is the logic that displays idiocy.

    There are no guarantees in life. Nothing ventured nothing gained.


  27. One thief breaks into the house and cyah way de money under de mattress. Yuh buy a safe an’ install security lights an camera, burglar bars and two big dogs.

    No longer an easy target.

    Will the outcome necessarily be the same?

    STEUPSE.


  28. I don’t feel safe here. Let me go back where I belong… Unable to contribute.


  29. A firm and unstinting obeisance to empire and all its institutional arms has been always seen as better.

    For that is far more important than agriculture and food security.

    With empire there can be no hiding, fooling, navigating political pimps. One must have an accurate knowledge of whom is lord.

    We’ve never had a government when forced to make this decision which has chosen agriculture and food security as a national project, over total submission, even devotion.

    And this country has done nothing if not serve this their god.


  30. I remember long before the 2018 election I was talking about CSME ignoring the importance of SPACE. President Ali with a background in urban and regional planning seems to understand its importance.


  31. Bushie – Guh siddung. Yuh talking pup.🤣🤣


  32. Now Barbados realises they will need Guyana to feed them in the future, will they cease the animosity and discrimination towards Guyanese like what was practiced over the past couple of decades?


  33. Not only the future. During Covid it was the Guyanese farmers operating in Bim who provided much food, edible substances


  34. Merrill Lynch pulling all investments from Europe.
    If we wanted another inflationary body blow with huge implication for food security, this is it.


  35. When the US starts hoarding its food that will provide an undeniable argument to the WTO.

    How de rass you could stymie my agriculture so you can dump your excess shit on us an den hoard yuh food when you have none to spare, leaving we tuh starve tuh death?

    Cyan happen! No more!


  36. Is necessity still the mother of invention?


  37. Enuff,

    I believe the correct term is, “Lotta shiite!” Wrapped in a pretty package.

    Bush Tee has a way with words that can often distract from the lack of substance.

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

    “A firm and unstinting obeisance to empire and all its institutional arms has been always seen as better.”

    yet here they are…that’s why following, endorsing and supporting them, gets ya exactly what ya deserve,,,,

    “When the Guyana government changes and a different attitude emerges, …What!!??”

    ya have ya own anonymous on BU talking about corrupt governments, but still voting them in, and hoping to see change without actually doing or saying anything to effect it…and you are worried about Guyana…lol

    “Six, the stealing Black peoples’ and poor peoples’ lands by lawyers”

    to hear about it live and on air is ugly indeed.


  39. @ Enuff
    You encouraged Owen to compromise Barbados with the CSME shiite and now hoping for some justification? LOL
    Boss, when things get tight and Ali decides to feed Guyanese FIRST, we aint going hear a single peek from you.

    Of course Bushie has made his own personal arrangement (YEARS now,) so when things get tight, pass by for a bake or fish cake…
    the bushman won’t let you starve….


  40. Bushie

    You really like the old time religion. Yuh won’t let go of these dated canards not even after nearly 40 years.

    This ultra isolationism is ………………………. Not that unbridled globalization should be an article of faith😩. But Bajan sugar boilers have been going to Guyana since hundreds of years.


  41. BUSH TEA IS AGAIN CORRECT
    I DO NOT KNOW MANY GUYANESE WHO ARE NOT DISHONEST
    ONCE THE GOVERN MENT COMES UP WITH AN IDEA WE MUST CLAP LOUDLY AND RUN WITH IT BECAUSE WHY…..?
    EVERY ONE IS LOOKING FOR UTOPIA.
    EVERYONE IS SUPPOSED TO BE “THE LIE”‘ BUT THE WRITING IS DEFINITELY ON THE WALL.
    NOW NOTE I DID NOT SAY THAT ALL GUYANESE ARE DISHONEST…….I SAID THAT I DO NOT KNOW MANY GUYANESE WHO ARE NOT DISHONEST
    I SAID NOT MANY…….NOT ANY


  42. Different approaches does not equal doing nothing.


  43. Here we go! We, the honest Bajans, must fear the dishonest Guyanese. Only a few honest Guyanese out there.

    Oh dear!


  44. We could bet that dishonesty can only apply to Black Guyanese. He is and has always been a self hating nigger.

    Never heard him refer to White people using such a generalized characterization.

    Sure he could find some bio-chemical theoretical justification for this inbred self hatred


  45. And who said that once the government comes up with an idea we must run with it? Steupse!

    Are only those who disagree allowed to express their disagreement? Are those who agree supposed to be quiet???

    Double steupse!

    But de guvment en waitin’ on you tuh run wid nutten!

    In this particular race I say, “Go Mia go! I right behin’ yuh!”

    No guarantees but you are doing what many have said needs to be done.

    We shall see how it pans out. We already know how it will pan out if you do NOTHING. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.


  46. There is nobody anywhere more dishonest than christians. Not even your own devil.

    The fictionalization of a bible, the creation of a slave approving god and innumerable other lies which have the whole world in a mess are the most dishonest things known to man.

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

    “There is nobody anywhere more dishonest than christians. Not even your own devil.”

    the worst thing by far to happen on our earth, they are hypocrites, liars, pretenders, deceivers, frauds, perverts, pedophiles, everything evil falls under that category….the devil would be very afraid of them..


  48. Was it Burnham who promised farm acreage to black Bajans if they immigrated to Guyana so it would change the demographics of the electorate ? or was it Barrow who came up with the idea?


  49. Waru

    Have you been following that historic Catholic mess in Canada, and all Christian’s are Catholics, which continues to this day. As an example of the criminal nature of all Western Christian’s, without
    exception,

    Francis seems to hold good intentions but the rot is so deep, poor fellow, he has no idea where to begin. Even of him, we must ask the question, how could he be in this mess all his life and not know about the wickedness right in front his face.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading