Submitted by Tee White

A poem by Barbados cultural ambassador, Anthony ‘Gabby’ Carter, on the death of
Elizabeth Windsor, queen of England has generated unwarranted criticism from
certain quarters on the island. The poem, reprinted below, points out some truths
about the British monarch and her relationship to the crimes of British colonialism.

For those with a strong allegiance to British colonialism, these truths were a bitter pill
to swallow and so, just like Malcolm X described, they jumped to the defence of their
colonial ‘massa’. Local media reported that some people labelled the poem as
“disrespectful”, “distasteful” and “uncivilised” while others demanded that the
Barbados government revoke Gabby’s National Honour status if he does not
apologise for penning the poem. Guy Hewitt, former Barbados High Commissioner to
the United Kingdom and recent contender for leadership of the opposition
Democratic Labour Party is reported as having strongly condemned the poem and
described it as bringing dishonour to Barbados. He is also reported to have stated
that not only was the poem in poor taste but that it also, “displayed Gabby’s
ignorance of the role of a constitutional monarchy, the history of the Commonwealth
of Nations and the late Queen’s role in it.”

In reality, it is those who are attacking Gabby and his poem who are bringing
dishonour on the country. Even as the country is trying to step forward as a new
republic, they are trying to honour and glorify its monarchical past under which the
African descendants were enslaved and subjected to every indignity under Britain’s
colonial apartheid. Those who want to defend Britain’s colonial crimes against the
people of Barbados but lack the courage to do so openly, try to frame the issue as
one of respect for the dead. But let Vladimir Putin die suddenly tomorrow and you
will see how much they believe in not speaking ill of the dead. How exactly was this
respect for the dead demonstrated on the death of Muammar Gadhafi, Robert
Mugabe or any other political leader that came into conflict with British colonialism?
No, this has nothing to do with respecting the dead and everything to do with
defending Britain’s colonial crimes.

Those who claim that Gabby doesn’t understand “the role of a constitutional
monarchy, the history of the Commonwealth of Nations and the late Queen’s role in
it” demonstrate with this statement that they are the ones who are ignorant of
Britain’s colonialist political system and the role that its monarchy and royal family
play in this oppressive arrangement. If Guy Hewitt’s words have been accurately
reported in the media, he has a lot of explaining to do to the people of Barbados.
Why is someone who aspires to political leadership in our country condoning and
justifying Britain’s colonial crimes against our people? Why is he attempting to falsify
history in order to justify these crimes? What type of political leadership can such an
individual provide?

Gabby is right and his poem expresses the sentiments of many Bajans. We need to
raise our voices and make this clear so that those trapped in mental slavery
understand that they’re not going to be able to drag us back or stop our forward
march.


GOOD RIDDANCE TO RUBBISH

She was over there in Africa
When she get de news
She father dead
She’ll be de British Head
No hesitation
No excuse !
There she was
Age twenty one
In the prime of her health
Flying home
Not to roam
But to Queen of the Commonwealth !
Queen of all of India
And New Zealand too
Canada and Australia
Mixed up in de brew
The English – speaking Caribbean
Will now become her tool
Over all these places
Young Lizzy will Rule !
All their natural resources
She hoarded
With an Iron Fist
Britania kept on rolling
Lizzy did see to this!
This quiet
Wicked Woman
Never lifted a hand
To help bring Reparations
To any Caribbean land

She stood in silence
( And full support )
When one Winston Churchill
Killed millions of poor Indians
Oh what a bitter pill !
She never uttered a single word
Against that Peta Botha
Whose Apartheid Regime
Unleashed its killer Beam
On the Blacks of South Africa
She inherited millions of pounds
From the gains of slavery
Yet she allowed each colony
To wallow in poverty
Seventy five
Long hard years
This Monarch Liz did Reign
She made sure her colonies
Made no economic gain
A few hours ago
We got the news
No lies
Fakes news or tricks
That Lizzy
Queen of England died
At the age of ninety six
I can’t offer no sympathy
I’ve never been a hypocrite
Her son Charlie
Is sure to be

Sitting where she did sit
At last !
He will become the Monarch
The British Ruler
The King !
If he brings us Reparations
Then I will support him !
Written September 8th 2022.
From 5.01 pm to 5.23 pm.
By:
Dr. The Most Honorable Anthony Gabby Carter
( Chief Omowale ).

583 responses to “Gabby is Right”


  1. Keeping it short.
    Key words “was used”.

  2. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Artax, what you say is fundamentally accurate but how is that not so generally across society and how can we expect it to be different here, re;

    “That woman is a NARCISSISTIC LIAR, who is allowed by the blogmaster to ‘COMMANDEER’ EVERY BLOG, to push her particular agenda, accompanied by a monotonous regurgitation of different versions of the same rhetoric.”

    As in life persons like the blogger will engage attention from others but eventually one realizes that it’s futile to engage with any practical critique so as the blogmaster’s noted above (and many times before) ‘we really should make our remarks and move on.’

    All of us bloggers have our quirks and triggers and biases. Some of us are quite petty with our agendas while others do it with more wit and comity … but at days end we all (according to the psychological profiles) still fit into the same designated types … so one could be a great Type A person who forever strives to be awesome with wit, humour and charm or one could do so while being the greatest assh***!

    If this was real-line activity and not virtual on-line life …. I’m sure you would NOT STILL be visiting the blogger’s home or going to places where you would see her; nor would you care who she hang out with, who agreed with her or what she did about anything …unless of course she was a public figure and her actions had an impact

    We are all here because we al like to hear/read ourselves .. and undoubtedly some of us are assh** and some not so much all the time 😎 . Just as in life …

    I try to employ real-life measures in this virtual rum-shop. It works like a magical charm!!!


  3. This blog is rapidly approaching its comments open life. Some of you should be ashamed of your inability to sensibly discuss issues.


  4. Last/last
    “All of us bloggers have our quirks and triggers and biases. Some of us are quite petty with our agendas while others do it with more wit and comity … but at days end we all (according to the psychological profiles) still fit into the same designated types … so one could be a great Type A person who forever strives to be awesome with wit, humour and charm or one could do so while being the greatest assh***!”

    Agreed with most of what was said there.

    Let me add, silence dies not mean that you agree with the person. As an example, I was silent when I felt that ac was in the wrong, but if she was right I would support her.

    There was a time I would ask others for links to stories, but after awhile I realized that out there somewhere was a secret hoard of information that was available to a select few. I try my best not to ask for links.

    I suspect most are silent, most already have an idea of who is truthful and most ignore what they think is incorrect.


  5. You seem to be of the MISTAKEN BELIEF you have an infinite ♾ amount of knowledge and information, which BU contributors have to RELY on you for its dissemination.

    That is ‘far from the truth.’

    YES, “the information is out there for EVERYONE TO RESEARCH themselves.”

    Artax September 17, 2022 10:12 AM:
    “Click sounds serve as regular consonants in Zulu and Xhosa and a few other African languages, such as Yeyi, Sandawe, Juǀʼhoan, Khoekhoe and Hadza……
    ……but were presumed to be used in English for encouraging a horse, imitating a kiss, or expressing emotions such as disapproval or amazement.”


  6. To those who travel there today, the West Indies are unspoiled paradise islands. Yet that image conceals a turbulent and shocking history.

    For some two hundred years after 1650, the West Indies were the strategic center of the Western world’s greatest power struggles as Europeans made and lost immense fortunes growing and trading in sugar-a commodity so lucrative it became known as “white gold.” Matthew Parker vividly chronicles how the wealth of her island colonies became the foundation and focus of England’s commercial and imperial greatness, underpinning the British economy and ultimately fueling the Industrial Revolution.

    Yet with the incredible wealth came untold misery: the horror endured by slaves, on whose backs the sugar empire was brutally built; the rampant disease that claimed the lives of one-third of all whites within three years of arrival in the Caribbean; the cruelty, corruption, and decadence of the plantation culture. Broad in scope, rich in detail,

    The Sugar Barons freshly links the histories of Europe, the West Indies, and North America and reveals the full impact of the sugar revolution, the resonance of which is still felt today.


  7. Brasstacks Sunday is riveting.


  8. But David
    It was an uncensored idea I thought of earlier this morning before any snide ruckus

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

    “Let me add, silence dies not mean that you agree with the person. As an example, I was silent when I felt that ac was in the wrong, but if she was right I would support her.”

    that’s the WHOLE problem, i could care LESS about other bloggers, what they post AND WHOM they interact with….i know the ones who share the same philosophies as i do and it’s much easier to interact with those because WE ARE ON THE SAME PAGE AS IT RELATES to our Afrikan ancestors and the BEST way forward..

    ..but there are those with petty minds that no one really wants to have anything to do with, and they refuse to leave other bloggers alone even though the shit they have being doing and post for YEARS IS STILL NOT GOING ANYWHERE…

    The brits STOLE AND COPIED EVERYTHING from our ancestors…….that’s why i said that Lawson is very likely very proficient in the art of the click language. it’s not like they did not know about it……THEY KNOW, WE DON’T…..there is MUCH more about the click language, but cannot be found on the internet…

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

    “The Sugar Barons freshly links the histories of Europe, the West Indies, and North America and reveals the full impact of the sugar revolution, the resonance of which is still felt today.

    the information out there now and some STILL NOT…..is the stuff of NIGHTMARES…

    ..that is why i was ADAMANT that my magazine will carry an article to call out the government and the minority parasites for even believing they can run that bullshit again by this generation of Afrikans of unaware young people, just the thought should have been more than adequate to prompt street protests…


  11. I give up. I don’t care about click, clicks, clique, cliques

    All that interest me was what sent my spider sense tingle.
    The few times I have heard the word used in the west was a put down. I believe that was the “Original intent”

    Key words “was used”.


  12. dpD

    I understand and agree your comments.

    But, what sense does it make for someone coming to a blog to give the impression he is the only person who have access to vital information, and, him, along with his select few are ‘all knowing,’ while us lesser mortals are referred to as ‘BU sheep, clowns, slaves, parrots, fools’ etc.

    Someone claims to own a blog, but rather than control their forum, they are relentless in their efforts to commandeer BU.


  13. The use of him puzzles me ..
    Perhaps there is a misread/misunderstanding somewhere
    For the record, my secret sources are Google and BT


  14. ☑️ How many ethnic group tick-boxes would you like
    people are people and data is data and lyrics is lyrics
    down here in babylon
    I still feel the chains around my feet
    tribal war won’t stop the problem
    🇲🇱
    Be Yourself

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s3ynDxHg5lg


  15. John @9.09am
    I thought when this point of the President appointing a LoO arose months ago, after the most recent election, your argument was a ‘nullity’, that 30-0 was not constitutionally viable, hence any position within, was unconstitutional.
    And this ‘no decision’, came on the heels of the PM, NOT the President, offering the DLP two Senate seats, when the Constitution made it clear it was the President’s decision.
    The party loyalists, will point out the President ‘may have’ decided this, but handed it to the PM to announce. Yet, not once to my knowledge, was this conveyed by either the PM or the President, to the voters.
    Beale’s greater point, and one I was for, were constitutional discussions BEFORE the Republic. This was shot down, arguing getting rid of the Monarch as HoS was more important.
    So now we must endure the pappy show of consultations and opinions toward a Republic Constitution of 2026.
    Bass Akwards.


  16. “Unspoiled paradise islands”.

    Really?


  17. Nah…… there hasn’t been any “misreading or misunderstanding.”

    I know who I’m referring to. ‘Him’ provides me with a level of protection, if a female decided to respond.

    😇 😃


  18. @NO

    Yes in theory a new Constitution should have been rolled out. We have a president and the pressure is on the government to fix it. Note with the ascension of Charles to the throne there is a hurry up by other commonwealth countries to jettison the monarchy. There will be no turning back now.

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

    Northern….you are going to have to endure a hell of a lot more than that….don’t seem like you got the memo either…


  20. Anyone with a modicum of procedural and policy knowledge knows that the discussion and agreement on the Constitition should have preceded the transition to a Republic.

    The way that proceeded was a major error.


  21. @Crusoe

    We are here now, let us fix it.

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

    “The way that proceeded was a major error.”

    NOT an error.


  23. I would caution that in “jettisoning tye monarchy”, the baby not be thrown out with the bathwater.

    The Commonwealth still has value.

    But what do I know, I am just a lil chap from Brumley.


  24. @Crusoe

    Don’t we have countries in the region that moved to republic and continue cordial relations with the UK/commonwealth?

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

    “The Commonwealth still has value.
    But what do I know, I am just a lil chap from Brumley.”

    Things have moved WAY BEYOND THAT…

    there is info circulating in certain circles, am surprised it has not reached you, John or Northern yet, there was bound to come a time when we can’t post certain things on here and have to more or less……..move into other areas for dissemination…because of what is coming out…


  26. “NOT an error”.

    If so…

    The best laid plans of mice and men….

    Even Vlad The Invader is still having difficulty understanding this simple concept, as he battles his own mortality with outward battles.

    The Universe is stronger than any of us.


  27. @Crusoe

    There is no muster here- Mottley seized the opportunity to ride pro #blm sentiment by removing Nelson, booting the Queen, appointing Rihanna a national hero all before the last election to check a box. It is why she is the political animal that she is and is one step ahead of the competition. Let us see what Dr. Ronnie will do.


  28. @David,

    Yes, but there is a difference between cordial and cooperative.

    All I am saying, is that in the excitement of the moment we do not miss the bigger picture.


  29. @Crusoe

    What is the ‘value’ you see in being a member of the Commonwealth? Give us something tangible you can cite.

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

    “The Universe is stronger than any of us.”

    yes it is and it would be nice if those stuck in their political comfort zones to nowhere will recognize that reality…..or not, i could care less who does…we have moved WAY PAST ALL OF THAT…as is already playing out..


  31. Is trade benefits tangible enough? Surely being in a stronger negotiating position than non-C members?

    Are special visa, skills transference, opportunities for both business and employment not tangible?

    Obviously, if you see no benefit, then clearly, we can all go home.

    Because if a government cannot negotiate any such benefits from the relationship, how would they fare in any open negotiations?

    This is just as much a time to strengthen diplomatic ties as any.


  32. @Crusoe

    The blogmaster is not aware that being a member of the commonwealth creates preferential access to their markets. Those days are gone.


  33. Hants

    Until I started researching history myself, I used to think that “King Sugar” grown in Barbados made the UK fortunes.

    The small island’s view of its own inflated importance.

    Here are the facts.

    In the 200 years after 1650, the sugar output of Barbados did not change.

    It was capped firstly by its tiny size and secondly its milling capacity. Only in the 20th century through steam and mechanization did the sugar output of Barbados increase significantly, twenty times.

    The slave population doubled in this period, from 40K to 80K.

    Sugar for Europe came principally from St. Domingue (~40%) and Suriname, the French and the Dutch.

    So, if it wasn’t sugar what other economic activity could explain why historians repeat ad nauseum the same story over and over again when it cannot possibly be true?

    It is a physical impossibility.

    The answer is Trade.

    In the days of sail, Barbados had not one but three things going for it.

    Location, location and location, because of the Trade Winds and the Atlantic Gyre.

    The islands of the Lesser Antilles were the gateway to the markets in North America for manufacturers in the UK just as Capetown in South Africa was the gateway to markets in India, Australia and China.

    When steam propulsion became possible in the 19th century, Cape Town became even more vital as a coaling station whereas the London New York cross Atlantic trade route gradually eliminated the advantages of location for Barbados.

    In the days of sail, ships passed through Barbados to be resupplied with water and provisions and take on cargo brought here by other ships.

    The merchants made the killing.

    This pen and ink drawing from 1695 shows the wealth was in the hands of the Merchants, the insignificant wooden windmills in the drawing produced little sugar.
    https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_prospect_of_Bridge_Town_in_Barbados_1695_by_Samuel_Copen_-_I._Kip_fecit_London._LCCN99472674.jpg

    It never ceases to amaze me how small many historians think.

    The UK was a maritime power like no other and developed through trade, 24/7/365, war or peace.

    Picking up a few tons of sugar from Barbados only at the end of the year’s crop and for a few visits cannot begin to explain the wealth the UK developed over the centuries.

    Here is a map of British Trade Routes between 1750 and 1800 worldwide.

    Contrary to what some historians would have you believe, Britain did not depend on sugar produced on 166 sq miles in the Caribbean for its daily bread, the whole world was its oyster.

    https://imgur.com/7WhVrOS

    Australia opened up after 1800 and Gold and Diamonds were found in South Africa at the end of the 1800’s, precipitating the Boer War.

    Relatively few visits were made to Africa for the simple reason that Britain did not depend on slaves producing sugar. Besides, the slave population was self-sustaining.

    The bulk of the slave trade was to Suriname and St. Domingue so if you look up Dutch Trade Routes on google you will see the difference.

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

    All of that is going to get WRITTEN OUT….

    John has already started twisting..


  35. The Constitutional Reform could not fit into the time frame to become a Republic

    In September 2020 BLP PM Mia Mottley announced in Throne Speech that Barbados would become a republic by November 2021, (15 months time)

    February 2022 Attorney General hopes that Barbados will have a Constitution by January 2024
    (2 years work)

    My Beat (Ambassador Extended Remix)

    My Beat / Blaze

    As we dance to a beat that seems out of time
    To the one you feel in the metronome of your mind
    Does it offend you that our rhythm looks strange
    Or causes your thinking to be re-arranged?
    Could it be that you would understand this beat to which we dance
    More clearly had you been given a chance?
    So as you struggle to find the feel with your feet
    Ask yourself, can you dance to my beat?

    Watch us get down to this groove with an Afro-funk feel
    While we get high to a rhythm with spiritual appeal
    Expressions of freedom from the descendants of slaves
    God gives us the strength for new horizons we must brave
    First bondage, then mental, now financially oppressed
    With this beat we dance, we know we’ve passed the test
    So as you struggle to catch the rhythm with your feet
    Ask yourself, can you dance to my beat?

    The rhythm, the rhythm, the rhythm is our power section
    The freedom we feel in our soul
    We dance to learn those lessons
    As our story continues to unfold
    Our beat, our words our melodies, our gifts
    From the givers of those gifts
    We’re merely the terminals to which they have passed
    So as you struggle to catch the rhythm with your feet
    Ask yourself, can you really dance to my beat?

    As we dance to a beat that seems out of time
    To the one you feel in the metronome of your mind
    Does it offend you that our rhythm looks strange
    Or causes your thinking to be re-arranged?
    Could it be that you would understand this beat to which we dance
    More clearly had you been given the chance?
    So as you struggle to find the feel with your feet
    Ask yourself, can you really, really dance to my beat?


  36. @David
    Going the Republic route had been ‘talked about’ for so long, I had no surprise at the decision. Nor disagreement. Yet one might have thought more ‘constitutional preparation’ would have been ‘in the works’.
    Similar choices have been ‘talked about’ elsewhere for many years. Possibly the change in Monarch will be the impetus for them to act.
    I don’t follow the UK scene closely, but the line for reparations and other forms of compensation is getting longer.
    Then there is the flip side, of what is the future of the UKOT. Of interest, is three of the largest offshore locations in our area, Bermuda, Cayman and BVIs remain Overseas Territories.
    Both are topics the UK Parliament has side stepped for years.


  37. @NO

    Yes, Mottley in her wisdom believed the ground work by earlier commissions was dated.

    https://gisbarbados.gov.bb/download/constitutional-review-reports/

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

    “Going the Republic route had been ‘talked about’ for so long, I had no surprise at the decision. Nor disagreement. Yet one might have thought more ‘constitutional preparation’ would have been ‘in the works’.”

    there was never meant to be one for the foreseeable future…..if ya get one in 2024…oh well, i would not trust it as far as i can read it….and by then……………

    some refuse to believe that it’s OVER…no matter how many times they are told by Pacha…etc.


  39. The other sad reality, is the elder expert on such matters, is waning. And could no longer participate. I speak of HdeBF.
    This left a huge void, from all I am told.


  40. Agreed NO, there is still Phillip Greaves, not sure how ‘active’ is he?


  41. NorthernObserver September 18, 2022 3:00 PM

    Anguilla and Montserrat “remain Overseas Territories” as well.

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

    Northern…..you are a quick study, you will figure it out..


  43. @Artax
    Correct. Actually 15 in total.
    Given the relative importance of ‘offshore’, to Barbados, the 3 mentioned were more relevant.
    I “think” the Turks &C are still too, but didn’t make the online list I found.


  44. “Picking up a few tons of sugar from Barbados only at the end of the year’s crop and for a few visits cannot begin to explain the wealth the UK developed over the centuries.”

    The most common reason people will be refuted on Bu is when they talk crap.
    How many times of refutation must it take with yours.

    Barbados was a Slave Port and was the initial plantation model for bigger plantations worldwide which fed the Atlantic Slave Trade, Industrial Revolution, Global Capitalism and then Colonialism of Americas, Africa, Asia, Australia.


  45. i.e. prototype


  46. Here is a good site to visualise trade and shipping for 100 years after the mid 18th century.

    Barbados did not need new slaves once its slave population was established.

    With limitation of its size and milling capacity it is unlikely that ships from Africa would have called.

    Its slave population was always growing.

    The Dutch would have brought most slaves from Africa to Suriname, and Brazil perhaps St. Domingue.

    If you watch the video of the ship movements, you will see that not many British ships went to the west Coast of Africa, but Dutch ones did.

    No need once the slave population was large enough to meet the production needs.

    Most slaves would have been transported in the 17th century which is not covered in this video.

    By 1817, about 95% of the slaves in Barbados were Barbadian born.

    https://kottke.org/12/04/visualization-of-shipping-routes-from-1750-to-1855

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

    so now that the population who are wide awake and have access to all types of available information and CAN’T be MISLED anymore….now what,,,,


  48. In the real world nobody calls themselves intellectuals and nobody boasts about winning a scholarship in their old age.

    But can any imagine reading a book John Knox wrote about slavery, everyone would be livid and would burn down all the plantations and lynch the owners.


  49. It is alleged Elizabeth last words to her Doctor Sir Huw, was
    “Los Barbados” and not (Moses). It certainly makes one think she was saying she lost Barbados to a Republic?

    She never recovered.

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