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The reaction by Barbadians to two more murders on the weekend evoked a predictable response – the AG should resign, what has gone wrong with our young people blah blah blah. The confirmation from the Barbados Police Service one of the men murdered was out on bail for 3 separate murders and the other well known to the ‘system’ added to the tongue wagging. The defense lawyers will argue a key tenet of jurisprudence is the presumption of innocence.

Two important considerations that are always consumed by predictable narratives at this time are parental delinquency and rehabilitation of incarcerated citizens . From where the blogmaster is perched there are no adequate mechanisms to support the two concerns which are at the root of what is causing young men and an increasing number of girls to fall through the cracks. The result is an unacceptable rate of recidivism. If there is a breakdown in the home and family unit, and the problem is made more acute by a system that pays lip service to rehabilitation of victims then society must take blame. A disproportionate focus on enforcement – which is important – will not move the needle to prevent crime in Barbados. A dysfunctional society will always be the root of the problem.


Barbados Murder Statistics 2017 to 2022

Attorney General Dale Marshall (Image Source: nationnews.com)

The recent surge in gun play in Barbados has been featured prominently in the media over the last few days (see hereherehereherehereherehere and here). 

On July 8, the Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs, The Honourable Dale Marshall, addressed this, and related matters, during a press conference (see here). During the presser, the AG also shared some statistics relating to murders and firearms between 2017 and present day:

“In 2017, of those 30 murders, 16 have been solved so far. In 2018, of the 28 murders, 19 have been solved, that 19 amounts to 68 per cent. In 2019, 27 of the 48 murders reported were solved; that’s 56 per cent. Of the 41 murders committed in 2020, 26 or 63 per cent have been solved [and] in 2021, 23 or 72 per cent of the 32 murders were solved. And for this year, of the 17 murders thus far, 10 have been cleared up and some of those have only happened in the last few weeks,” the Attorney General disclosed. 

Source: Barbados Government Information Service

As a Barbadian citizen and resident, the topic of crime and violence (especially gun related) is of great importance and a worry to me. However, the majority – if not all of my posts – rarely deal with my personal views and opinions. As a data analyst on the other hand, I try to focus on what is being reported (in terms of facts, figures, et cetera), and collecting, compiling and analyzing said data and information. I was therefore excited when the AG shared some statistics which I will now look at below.

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165 responses to “How Many More Must Die…We Are to Blame”


  1. Less is more.


  2. The murderer/killer of the past acted alone and given time to reflect in jail could change because he/she came from an era when even if his/her parents did not do a good job there were enough role models the murderer/killer would have grown up seeing to understand right from wrong.

    So all four members of SS’s crime family and the guy I knew could self correct because they had more than a germ of morality within them.

    Murderers in a gang today are soldiers and kill with impunity.

    They are programmed.

    There is little chance of change from within because the seeds were either never planted or any growth was snuffed out in the programming and like many here they do not believe in God.

    In growing up they missed out on that piece of the puzzle of life.

    It is no point believing such a person can self correct, regardless of how much help is offered.

    Not to say you should not try but chances of success are slim.


  3. I do not know why SS felt the need to make that post. She has fed the 🐇/. See rabbit go.
    Truly a case of ‘Less is more’

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

    “Sometimes the envy and the ‘bad mind’ can hit you like a ton of bricks. But it does not end there, if they can they would sabotage your effort at self improvement.”

    these days there is GUARANTEED FAILURE because the era changed when no one was paying attention…so sinister moves that were successful for decades are no longer applicable or doable in the spiritual space..

    that is what will expose many, they never noticed the shifting sand.


  5. Just having a little sport, but apart from the “patient” no one contradicting me!!

  6. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @Donna
    This is a continuation of who we are?
    The other morning, a neighbour asks if he could ride along to Toronto, he heard I was going. It’s a 3hr drive on a good day. And gas is expensive.
    As we reach the outskirts of the city, now on multi lane highways, the traffic slows. Seems all in the outside lane (usually highest speed lane) are moving over to pass a slow moving car. As we reach its an Audi, as we pass it’s a black woman driving. So the fella says “I could have told you, though my first guess would’ve been an Asian woman”.
    So I ask him “did you see her face?”. He replies “A lot of makeup and jewelry”. I said “no you numnuts, the woman was petrified”. She is unaccustomed to highway driving. If your neck were her steering wheel you would be dead.
    I am not saying the white woman in the grocery store was not rude, and possibly if you were white she may have said nothing.
    She may also have had a bad day, which doesn’t make her behaviour any more acceptable. Or you may have been on alert because she was white.
    The challenge is when that sticks with us.
    I heard a great many derogatory statements towards people of colour as a boy. And upon arriving in Canada at 16, and I lived then in a smaller city (read 99% white) where suddenly so many of those statements ” did not apply”. Meaning all of the people, hence jobs, were performed by white people. You couldn’t make one off comments to imply a dig at skin tone, even if you didn’t use black (or worse).
    Then I reached University, again a smaller town, slightly more diversity, but lo and behold I discovered some white people did not like other white people!!!! Not that this wasn’t true in Bim either.
    Some christians had a beef with the jews, and vice versa. But it was kids from the big cities, the smaller town folk didn’t know a Jew. We were far more likely to have crossed paths with a Mennonite or Hutterite than a Jew.
    As time has passed, humans always seem to find a reason to separate, discriminate and criticize. Myself included.
    Early in my business career I had bad experiences with a Christian who was a sometimes preacher (lay minister?) and a Muslim man, who was very devout. The challenge was they were both crooks, it had nothing to do with their religion nor their skin tone. But I admit, I was very cautious in dealings with those displaying “high religious leanings” for some time. It didn’t help that my employers CFO was a devout SDA, and was fired for fraud. (creating employees which didn’t exist and pocketing the $$)
    I have often wondered, what it is like being black, and living in a black country, without the history of Barbados. Hard to find, because slavery was so pervasive. Yet, without a deep understanding (I lived in Eritrea for a while) it seems many have ethnic (tribal?) ways to separate and discriminate. Maybe religion? We humans always seem to find something?
    I wish I could get inside an animal’s brain to appreciate what they think.
    Ah well.


  7. “For years I volunteered at a community credit counselling service, the one thing which was common to most (there were unusual circumstances for some) was their ‘lifestyle’ was built on debt
    They wanted “a solution”. They wanted the debt to ‘go away’ or be reduced to something ‘they could manage’, preferably without lifestyle change.”

    I want to piggyback on NO’s comment in a next post.
    Yesterday a young man approached me for help and a part of the help was for money to pay a barber. I asked him waht was the cost of the barber …$40.00. “Was $50.00 before covid, but it came down during covid”.

    That hurt me. My son would never ask me for $40 for a barber for he knows (1) I am not going to give it to him and (2) he will always hear of the day he wanted a fortune to get his hair cut.

    Here was young man in need of help, but could not adjust his expectations to suit his circumstances. I gave him $20.00 and told him to find a new barber. I also asked him, if his friendscould not cut his hair.

    These young men want fancy stuff and somebody has to pay for it. If they cannot adjust then someone has to hurt.


  8. I need no reminder, David. The two sick scholars are on their own.

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

    Northern…i liked that post….colonists did a great job of dividing everyone and stinking up the earth with falsehoods and crooks….but don’t fear, we have moved from the physical into the spiritual space….where those deceits don’t work…problem is, not many believe in the spiritual, so they must end everything where they are most comfortable…= THEY ARE STUCK…

    saw a video this morning where an 11-year-old British kid took the WEF to task and let them know straight up that creatures and monsters from a bygone era will not control their lives or future EVER….she was very forceful and told those old, raggedy dying snakes off….so what we were unable to do in the way of shaking and upending the murderous status quo……the children are ready willing and able to destroy all crimes against humanity…..and the perpetrators too..


  10. @Donna

    Good.


  11. NO sounds like you were just starting in business after you got some experience you should have realized that Christians eat fish on fridays and feed on everyone else the rest of the week. I rented to a few middle easterners and after the deal is done I used to think that it was fete complete, but they saw it as the start of negotiations.


  12. NO,

    I bet that she was having no worse of a day than any of the thousands and thousands of black people I have met in the supermarket over the decades.

    Beside which, she should be sensitive to the history of Barbados and in some ways, the current reality of Barbadian “apartheid” and keep her ass quiet if she isn’t a racist or does not wish to be seen as racist.

    I have had bad days as well but I have NEVER taken it out on people who had nothing to do with making them so.

    As for being on alert because she was white, I doubt it. I take all people as they present themselves to me and I am always genuinely surprised when people act in such a manner to little humbugs. It’s not only white people that overreact but it is not the norm in that supermarket. It just doesn’t happen there.

    I can tell when I am being talked down to. She was dripping with it. Last time I heard those tones was when that Hoad girl thought she could put me in “my place” for “disrespecting” the Queen of England.

    That did not go very well for her.


  13. Now off to the bar to prove that the alcohol level s on your bottles are bull excrement. 4 of us Knocked off 42 beers in 2hrs at chill bar something seems suspect.


  14. TheO,

    I was thinking that he wished he had a job where he could dress up and be thought of as “somebody”. At first I reacted negatively to his words and attitude towards someone who had done nothing to stop him from achieving. But after being exposed to those who know, I came to understand more clearly the reality of many people who live in certain communities.

    This is why I speak of the marginalised communities. Some of us take opportunities for granted.

    I have been watching some Jamaican movies online and the stories they tell are of a life of daily struggle that I have never known. These are ordinary people who decided to form a movement to help their struggling community and give the youth an outlet. I watch the movies and I feel the sense of hopelessness. It is like another world.


  15. “People can have suicidal thoughts long term or short term at any time. Having to go to an outside clinic doesn’t always address the immediacy of resolution. 24 hours help if available can help those whose reactions of self destruction are preferable to calm down rethink and put off actions of suicide.”

    “However where are govt programs set up like counselling hotlines where people having mental problems triggering negative thoughts can be heard and counsel. The social sides of govt programs are not providing enough help for people having to go through the negative stresses of today.”
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    It’s clear the author of the above comments is ‘LARGELY IGNORANT’ of issues relating to mental illness and what service are available in Barbados.
    But, we all know it is easy for some people to come on BU to talk shiite for ‘cheap laughs’ and ‘scoring cheap political points.’

    I’m not a psychiatrist, nor am I a psychiatric nurse or trained in the field of psychiatry. And, as such, I won’t come to this forum to pontificate on a subject of which I do not have any knowledge.
    I simply mentioned: “But, we must also bear in mind COUNSELLING SERVICES for MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES are AVAILABLE at the Psychiatric Hospital.’

    NEVER MENTIONED ANYTHING about SUICIDE.

    However, please bear in mind the Psychiatric Hospital is opened ‘TWENTY-FOUR/SEVEN’ (24/7). There isn’t anything PREVENTING anyone who believes he/she may require counseling as it relates mental health issues, including depression and suicidal thoughts…… from CALLING the Psychiatric Hospital and TALKING to a counselor.

    And, the QEH also has a Department of Psychiatry or Psychiatric Unit that provides in-patient care for persons requiring acute care; out-patient services and TWENTY-FOUR (24) HOUR emergency and consultation services.

    Taking the above information into consideration, i.e. that any individual who believes he or she requires counselling for ‘whatever reason,’ could telephone the Psychiatric Hospital and ASK to SPEAK to a counsellor…..

    …… only an IDIOT would respond with the following comments:

    “Some are not understanding the measures built into the suicide program including precaution and preventative measures.”
    “Expecting a suicidal person in the middle of night to go to a psychiatric hospital all by self seeking help is intellectual madness.”

    The thought of such a person, “harrows me with fear and wonder.”


  16. 😄
    Now I am feeling good.
    You have confirmed there was no poetry in that submission.


  17. Artax,

    The one thing she said that is true – there is a stigma attached to mental challenges that would deter many people from seeking help. Many will therefore try to tough it out and work through it alone.

    One does not need to be an expert to know that. One only needs to be a human.being.


  18. Play resume the intensity of the bowling increased which found the batsman swipiing all over the place but some how the bowler remained steady in accuracy throwing another ball slowly down the pitch waiting with anticipation to see how the batsman would handle his drive

    psychologist Shawn Clarke is calling on the state to pay urgent attention to the mental health and emotional wellbeing of citizens.
    He said that while he is aware that the Government is working around-the-clock to achieve and maintain economic growth, it is time that resources be put towards dealing with the psychological challenges that young people, particularly young males, are facing.
    “Youth and community organisations need to come out and play their part as well in terms of putting on other social activities, workshops, seminars, whatever, at the community level.
    “We need to get back our community centres vibrant again, not only in terms of cultural activities, but in terms of activities sharing information with the populace about suicide, about mental health, about self-esteem building, about being able to cope with the pressures of today,” he said during an interview with Barbados TODAY

    Xxccc
    Tea time would be back after the break


  19. I see it. I love it..
    Afternoon play by ac
    Play resume at quarter to three
    See the bowler’s focus and intensity
    Pace increased and hot like a bowl of peppa
    Crowd eyeing batsman and saying ‘poor fella’
    Batsman swiping and missing the ball
    Telling the umpire he can’t see at all
    Umpire gestures to turn on the lights
    Crowd laugh and says ‘this is broad daylight’
    Batsman gestures for help from de stands
    enuff bawls out ‘relax and play your hand’
    Lorenzo getting ready but missing a shoe
    Enuff running around saying he can’t find J2
    Bowler tired of waiting and says in a huff
    Looks like none of wunna is man enough.


  20. I think ac should be paid for the volume and quality of her efforts.
    I am always amaze when I see those golden nuggets carelessly tossed into her work

    Not certain, I think it was NO who referred to her as ‘poet laureate’… Truly deserving of the title.

    You go girl.
    😃I must have ac head at three times it normal size 😄


  21. I have been watching some Jamaican movies online and the stories they tell are of a life of daily struggle that I have never known. These are ordinary people who decided to form a movement to help their struggling community and give the youth an outlet. I watch the movies and I feel the sense of hopelessness. It is like another world.

    Good stories will capture the feelings of hopelessness well.
    In USA and Jamaica they describe cities as a war zone between gangs.
    They want to make money but it comes at cost to the community.
    Gangs pay off police to continue their ops and work with Government to keep it under control.

    I’ve been watching some true life stories about Crack in LA with cocaine imported by CIA working with Contras in late 80s and how it hit black communities and get the feeling that is what is simmering away in Barbados.

    Kids aren’t afraid of fighting, dying or going to jail, but they are afraid of living like slaves.

    Aspirations For Young Xol

    Xol’s Pain


  22. Play resume but seems another standby female batter is at.the wicket
    DonnaAugust 5, 2022 4:37 PM

    Artax,

    The one thing she said that is true – there is a stigma attached to mental challenges that would deter many people from seeking help. Many will therefore try to tough it out and work through it alone.

    One does not need to be an expert to know that. One only needs to be a human.being.
    Xccccc
    Couldn’t make this sh.it up
    Now a decision has to be made her efforts although meaningful sends a challenge to this asking
    Does she understand the challenges of a mind that cannot process the normal.and everyday things of live and the kind of effort it takes to push self forward daily
    Xxxxxxx
    Waiting to see in what direction she sends that ball
    I suspect the retired batsman might one to take a wild swipe at that ball.


  23. Donna August 5, 2022 4:37 PM #: “The one thing she said that is true – there is a stigma attached to mental challenges that would deter many people from seeking help. Many will therefore try to tough it out and work through it alone.”

    Donna

    NEVER ‘SAID’ someone “needs to be an expert to know that there is a stigma attached to mental challenges that would deter many people from seeking help.”

    Recall in my 10:25 AM contribution, I ‘said’ some people prefer to live in denial, refusing to seek help when and where it is available.

    Based on RELIABLE information received, the Psychiatric Hospital provides counseling on a 24 hour basis.
    Some people prefer not to seek help because they either fear being admitted to the hospital and, as you alluded to, the “stigma attached to mental challenges.”
    However, the law requires the Hospital to admit suicidal persons seeking counseling therefrom, as a precaution to prevent them from harming themselves.

    Counseling involves talking to the individual, which is followed by an psychiatric assessment.

    What I realize, especially from those persons who have a political motivated agenda, is that they make definitive statements about issues of which they do not have any knowledge or formal training…… or without having conducted the relevant research.

    Case in point. If angela cox KNEW the Psychiatric Hospital provides counseling on a TWENTY-FOUR (24) HOUR BASIS, she WOULD NOT have asked:
    “However WHERE are govt programs set up like counseling hotlines where people having mental problems triggering negative thoughts can be heard and counsel?”

    Additionally, being IGNORANT of the above information, then, it was ABSOLUTELY LUDICROUS for her to mention:
    “The social sides of govt programs are not providing enough help for people having to go through the negative stresses of today.”

    How does she KNOW that and where is the EVIDENCE to SUBSTANTIATE her CLAIMS?

    I have heard about case involving a young girl who, at ten (10) years old, had multiple sexual partners.
    There are also young girls struggling to cope with ‘lesbianism,’ (if that’s actually a word), suicide, sexual molestation and abuse by relatives and close family friends.
    But, you should appreciate why such information is not publicized.
    But, these are some of the problems confronting the island’s health care system.

    So, it’s okay for angela cox to come on BU talking shiite for ‘cheap laughs.’


  24. GP August 5, 2022 5:39 PM

    Agreed.


  25. Well.the end of day play and as was expected the retired batsman showed up.for play relieving the female batter
    He positions himself in an awkward manner to face another onslaught of fast paced bowling
    Needless to say some method of frustration and angst is showing up in his style
    The bowler is quite aware knowing full well that the batsman cannot by the flip of his wrist perform magic
    Today was an exciting day some what a surprise when a female batter smoothly positioned herself at the wicket to.bat
    Having a two for one performance The bowler can proudly say that there are some balls even the greatest batsmen avoids
    The greatest Sir Gary Sobers once said that
    End of game play now
    back to the Pavillion I think I might hurt my wrist


  26. @John August 5, 2022 7:17 AM “If you were afflicted by addiction to drugs, alcohol, money and women and the addiction was leading you into trouble.”

    There is no such thing as an addiction to women. That is just John’s way of blaming women for MALE CRIMINALITY.


  27. @Donna August 5, 2022 8:00 AM “Cuhdear Bajan, You do know about exceptions and rules, don’t you? There are numerous comprehensive and in-depth studies by criminologists that overrule the small sample of FOUR upon which you base your position. STEUPSE!”

    I am not aware that I was taking a position. I believe that I stated that in some cases that I know of alcohol, greed, mental illness etc. was involved. I never said that those things were the cause of all killings.

    And all of the killers and victims were not black. Some were white.

    Now remembering another killing. Even though a man died and even though a man was charged, there was no conviction. In this case a bully was beating the woman he lived with because she objected to another woman being brought to live in the home. A neighboring man intervened and showed the bully with absolutely finality that you can’t come into this village and disrespect and beat one of our women. The bully is as they say “resting peacefully”. He has never again beaten a woman.

    Who says that nobody intervenes in cases of domestic violence?


  28. @Donna August 5, 2022 9:17 AM “When almost all black people were deprived, when only white people had money, when we looked left and right and everybody was in the same boat, nobody felt marginalised. This was accepted as just the way things were.”

    You beginning to sound like John now, with foolish talk about people accepting their oppression. People have never accepted being oppressed. Even toddlers are quick to say “that’s unfair”. People revolted in small ways and big, from spitting in the master’s food [especially effective in the days of TB] to injuring their children, eating the children’s food, to “stealing” their stuff, to deliberately working slowly, to burning crops, to migrating at any opportunity, to full scale armed rebellions. Perhaps because I am the only one on this blog who had conversions with a grandmother born in the 1870’s I understand how people have always objected to being oppressed.

    Human beings have never that accepted that this is/was just the way things were.


  29. @TheOGazerts August 5, 2022 1:34 PM “I do not know why SS felt the need to make that post. She has fed the 🐇/. See rabbit go.”

    Please note that note all of the killers nor victims were black Bajans. Some were white people too.


  30. @Northern at 2:16 “It didn’t help that my employers CFO was a devout SDA, and was fired for fraud. (creating employees which didn’t exist and pocketing the $$)”

    When Little Johnnie was just just a teen he told me that such people were Badventist, those who give their professed faith a bad name.

    There are such people in every single religion.


  31. @Donna August 5, 2022 2:34 PM “The two sick scholars are on their own.”

    A waste of the labor and tax money of my elder siblings, my parents and grandparents.


  32. @Artax August 5, 2022 4:19 PM

    Mental illness, psychological distress etc. may be short term and resolved with talk therapy and medication; but some illness can only be managed by a lifetime of talk therapy and chemical therapy. Sadly sometimes people abandon treatment because it seems not to be working fast enough or well enough. Some mental illness, may like diabetes, last for a lifetime, and may require a lifetime of treatment.

    What can families do? Encourage the person who is suffering to continue treatment including id possible accompanying the person to the treatment.


  33. I thought it would be covid but in barbados it appears there is a new bad back


  34. Cuhdear Bajan,

    Maybe I could have put it better because what you gathered was certainly not what I intended.

    I NEVER said that black people accepted oppression. They were always striving for a path forward. They knew that it would be a long struggle. They accepted that it would be a long struggle. That was the way it was. It was the place from which they started. It was NOT the place that they expected to end.

    Since most of them were rowing in the same boat, they did not feel MARGINALISED. There was a sense of community and belonging. There was hope that we could all move forward as a race.

    Whether justified or not, people believed in Grantley Adams’ good intentions. People believed in Errol Barrow’s good intentions. There were others before, both political leaders and agitators in whom people trusted. There was more of a movement for change.

    Now THAT is what has changed.

    Our progress has stagnated or even regressed. Too many have been left behind, up a creek without a paddle. There is no widespread and vibrant movement for change. There are no trusted leaders to inspire the masses. There is much cynicism. In many, there is hopelessness.


  35. Angela Cox,

    I have criticised NOTHING that you have said. I rarely do. I leave that to Artax.

    All I have done is point out one valid point you have made. So I do not know what you are on about.

    I have said before and I’ll say it again. I no longer play in your games.

    What I have said is that people with mental challenges such as severe depression and suicidal thoughts often do not seek help because of the stigma attached to doing so.

    And so they suffer in silence and die at rope’s end.

    And THAT, to borrow a phrase, “CANNOT BE REFUTED”.


  36. After being elected ! govt ministers should take a course in transparency and accountability
    Yesterday outlandish speech by Kerrie Symmonds bodes well to say that he does not understand the meanings of both words
    Also how the approach of good goverance is founded
    Rather than take a stand for good goverance he placed on his head his gangster style political hat and tried to kill several birds with one stone
    Fortunately for those who stood vanguard for good goverance hoisted on transparency and accountability the loose lips of Symmonds only further exposed this govt protection of big business and govt gladiator style approach of shutting the people out from knowing the truth wherever it might lead
    All Symmonds word did was to further open a can of worms
    Worms that might have been hidden underground which many might have not known existed
    The people right to know has been a vibrant and workable part of a democracy and when that right is taken away the democracy becomes nothing more than a process of mockery
    Symmonds now can be seen as the poster boy of a mock democratic process a process beginning to lose its way under this govt as he spoke words undergirded of protectionism for a few outlandish attacks seemingly to embarrassed and curtail others and shut out people’s right to know
    Shame on you Symmonds


  37. Have to agree with ac here.

    This man Symmonds must have been drinking something stronger than mauby before coming up with that speech.

    Here we are thinking that he and the ‘Fear Trading Commission’ (which he appoints) are there to represent the interest of ORDINARY Bajans, only to find our that he is the ‘Emera rep’…. and have the GALL to be cussing representatives of ordinary folks who are only seeking transparency….????

    Stranger things have happened….Perhaps Emera has now hired a relative of his as one of their ‘Directors’…
    ….as is their wont….

    What a place…..
    …and David keeps talking about ‘HOPE’…??!!
    LOL
    ha ha ha
    GRASS!!!


  38. @Bush Tea

    The FTC is to protect the interest of BOTH sides?


  39. The field ready set
    Two batsmen came on to the field one did a thorough inspection and found everything to be alright
    The second batsman came with his usual style scored a single and was quickly sent packing back to the Pavillion
    So far The bowler arms length is in fine order Needless to say that several well paced delivered long hops was pounded against Symmonds head with the word traitor attached

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

    Bushman….they still got the nerve to believe no one knows who they are and what to expect….the root of all corruption passed down through generations….they still believe they look and sound good, maybe to cult fowls only…


  41. RE Cuhdear BajanAugust 5, 2022 9:24 PM

    @Donna August 5, 2022 2:34 PM “The two sick scholars are on their own.”

    A waste of the labor and tax money of my elder siblings, my parents and grandparents.

    SIMPLE SIMON
    I WANT YOU TO KNOW THAT I RESPONDED POLITELY AND HONESTLY TO YOUR COMMENT ABOVE
    BUT MY POST GET TEK DUNG…….AS IT OFTEN DOES
    THEN YOU WONDER WHY THE ACADEMICS AND SCHOLARS DROP OUT FROM SOCIETY AND WHY MOSTLY SEMI ILITERATES POST HERE

    WHY SHOULD THEY DISOBEY JESUS’ ADVICE AND CAST THEIR PEARLS TO THE SWINE?
    MAYBE KING DYAL WAS CORRECT IN THE NOMENCLATURE HE USED FOR OUR PEOPLE.

    TEK DIS DUNG NOW
    I WILL JUST LAUGH AS I ALWAYS DO


  42. And no BU regular ever rejected Dr. Lucas’ professional opinion.


  43. Good afternoon David et al,

    Data for July 2022 has been posted:

    https://www.caribbeansignal.com/2022/08/06/barbados-murder-statistics-january-to-july-2022/

    Kind regards,
    Amit Uttamchandani
    http://www.caribbeansignal.com


  44. RE And no BU regular ever rejected Dr. Lucas’ professional opinion.

    MAYBE BUT HE GONE ANYWAY AND BU READERS LOST THE BENEFIT OF HIS EXPERTISE

    BU REGULARS SCOFFED AT MY VERY ACCURATE MEDICAL PPTS IN MEDICAL CORNER AND I HAVE STOPPED BRINGING THEM
    BU READERS LOST THAT EXPERTISE TOO

    I USED TO BEG FOLK WITH EXPERTISE TO COME HERE
    THEY TOOK ONE LOOK AND RAN
    WHO WANTS TO CAST THEIR PEARLS TO THE SWINE?

    WE NOW HAVE IN ITS PLACE LOTS OF MUSIC VIDEOS AND WARU WARU BULL SHITTING ALL DAY EVERYDAY


  45. Thanks Amit.


  46. @Bushie,

    “Here we are..”..

    Just as those HR departments, so popular in corporates for somecyears now, are to protect the interest of the body corporate / top management and not the employees.

    Newbie employees fall for the corporate spiel, but seasoned employees know to nod, smile and then flush the verbiage where it belongs.

    Doan say nuttin to them HR people thst you would confide to a friend.

    Or, it goes straight back to executives.

    Nuttin!


  47. Symmonds ought not to show up himself in Parliament again
    He openly exposed himself as fronting for big business while pressing his knees in the necks of citizens working on behalf of a free and open democracy
    Today social media platforms spared no words in expressing their open opinions about his lowlife treatment of Dr. Yearwood and Tricia Watson and others who dared this govt to.be transparent when dealing with the affairs of people and country
    This govt has taken it upon itself to belive that their have a bully pulpit to do and say whatever pleases them while they support and cuddle big business efforts to shut the people out govt and corporation dealings


  48. @ Crusoe
    Boss, if you calling David a ‘newbie’ with his “The FTC is to protect the interest of BOTH sides?” BS…
    Count the bushman out …. LOL
    Not stinking Bushie boozie…


  49. @ ac
    Symmonds is of the same ilk as as your shiitehound Stinkliar… a lotta bluster ..and VERY little substance.
    It is why his donkey is no longer anywhere near to tourism.

    Problem is that he is showing himself to be EVEN more lost now in this ministry..
    He can’t play ball, so he is trying to attack the other players….
    LOL …. he may have picked on the wrong crowd.

    …..so Bushie is predicting that he will become senior minister in Sport next kick downwards…


  50. Sincklar who?

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