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By Wade Gibbons

Has anyone noticed that this escalation in gun violence and crime has basically evolved after reputed drug lords smilingly waved their signed invitations to the public, at the Parliamentary swearing-in ceremony of the government in 2018? Their demonstrated delight suggested that they believed the government had their backs. It has been gay abandon in the underworld and mayhem in civil society since then, with armed thugs feeling emboldened and empowered, and doing as they please, even in broad daylight. 

“Give we de money and de guns and watch we” is arguably the new mantra of deviants today.

Barbados should be a relatively easy place to police. If one walks too far in any direction, one will likely end up in the sea after passing several familiar faces. The police must reclaim the streets. The constant daylight carnage suggests criminal elements no longer consider the police a significant enough threat to stop them from carrying out their dastardly deeds. There is de jure leadership of the Barbados Police Service. But there is a perception among many in and outside the organization that after engineered supersession, de facto leadership is calling significant, unwanted internal shots (no pun intended). That a civilian can announce the formation of a police unit does nothing to quell that belief. Consistent, intelligent, robust policing, unhindered by political agenda and novices, is required if the current insanity on the streets is to be curtailed. 

But rather than fortify systems to put violent, anti-social, unrepentant fiends behind bars or under the earth, the government has coddled them with its ill-conceived ‘piece’ programme. There is nothing wrong with investing in initiatives to increase opportunities for young people. But if you channel millions of dollars into the path of drug dealers and their violent spawn, what do you expect them to buy? Laptops – to start community projects? Fertilizer and seed – to switch to agriculture? If I am a drug dealer with henchmen in my employ, I am investing in more drugs and more guns with the state’s money. But the government, preoccupied with narcissism rather than the law-abiding citizenry, has shown it is willing to consort even with the spirit of strife Eris to remain relevant.

On reflection, though I do not subscribe to illegal wiretapping, how wonderful it would have been if those who orchestrated the tapping of the phones of late Prime Ministers Thompson and Arthur, and other law-abiding citizens for purely political reasons, had instead bugged the phones of known or suspected felons. Can one imagine the type of intelligence that could have been obtained if the phones of ‘prominent’ drug dealers had been monitored? It is not farfetched to surmise that such intelligence could have preempted some of the “wild, wild west” drama unfolding on our streets. This gathering of information would have proven much more beneficial to the country’s safety and security than the present gatherin’.

Standards in Barbados have dropped. When one loses or surrenders one’s grip on the small things, bigger problems frequently follow. For example, children (males especially) are now going to school with hairstyles and apparel resembling what is seen on the blocks around the country. And seemingly with the Ministry of Education’s blessing. Within the scheme of the blood-letting on our streets, this seems minor. But the argument is really about standards and messaging to our young people. Dress codes and hairstyles were once tied into overall school and social discipline. Allow a little; lose a lot! Discipline is going fast . . . at school, and at home where children leave with their parents’ approval. A breakdown often initially manifests itself somewhere and in the current decadent political climate, seemingly small things can swiftly mushroom into the negative.

Governance by public relations and infiltration of institutions (public and private) can only go so far. There comes a time when policies and implementation are required for progress. The government has been brilliant with public relations and infiltration but wears a dunce cap and sucks its thumb with clueless relish when it comes to progressive policies. The legislature needs to formulate development plans on what “to do”. It has seemingly been concentrating on laws instructing persons what “not to do”. Several pieces of legislation brought to the Lower Chamber, then withdrawn due to flaws, have become commonplace. But at least, the debacle that has been the Constitutional Reform Commission’s report has showcased a measure of consistency.
Controlling traditional media as the government has ensured, keeps the state’s soiled linen under wraps and turns some journalists into professional eunuchs but it does the general public a disservice. The attempt to control social media by proposing legislation that could criminalise truths if they hurt or embarrass feelings, detracts from otherwise sound efforts to stymie cybercrime and cyberbullying. The offensive part of that law is a survival tool under the guise of protecting society. Could this be the decade of legends in their own minds preparing for, or seeing themselves, as a government in perpetuity?

Controlling the Central Bank’s narratives ensures continued annual growth on a foundation of borrowed money, increasing debt and struggling and non-productive sectors. But that mirage does nothing for Little Miss Muffet starving on her Tuffet without either curds or whey. When growth has minimal effect on the suffering working class, and money is circulating mainly in the upper echelons of society, then the Emperor is fully clothed and Nero’s flute is at high pitch as Barbados burns. Would that an accountant be entrusted with the governorship of the Central Bank rather than any economist. 

There have been some questionable occurrences within the justice system and there must be concern about the separation of powers in Barbados. Is the judiciary being unnecessarily influenced, infiltrated, or assaulted? In jurisdictions like the United States of America, if a President overrides an order of the Supreme Court and awards millions of taxpayers’ dollars to public servants who lose a civil action brought against the state, that President’s head is likely to roll. If the courts in America remained silent, there would be a national and media uproar. That country would see such a development as profoundly perverse. Barbadians need to pay closer attention to home.

Following the Kirton’s, St Philip murder over the weekend, the media interviewed some residents and there was a sense of resignation among them, as though “it is what it is”. One man suggested Bajans have to be careful and learn to “live with it”. It is a dangerous development when people start getting numb to crime. It is a disaster if they start believing that nothing can be done about violent crime. The government and especially the police should take note of those public utterances. The Barbados Police Service is blessed with numerous outstanding individuals but the government has not been the best role model for others to follow. And the gangsters on the streets need little encouragement.


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63 responses to “Can Bajans survive a potentially decadent decade?”


  1. Schools are not responsible for the growth in crime, they are not producing criminals. The social initiatives for mentoring children and young men are positive especially in times of high unemployment.


  2. There is something wrong with seeing things in terms of decades alone.

    First, there was the lost decade.

    Now, a decadent decade is proffered.

    Elsewhere, there’s talk about a lost century.

    There seems to be a certain and simplictic or poetic or linguistic rhythum herein.

    Whether looking forward or backward a certain “nostalgia” seems to be inescapable, preordained.

    Why not go back 150,000 years for real meaning to inform the next 150,000, if we so last?


  3. “Why not go back 150,000 years for real meaning to inform the next 150,000, if we so last?”
    ~~~~~~~~~~~
    Mean like…
    “In the beginning was the word,
    and the word was with God
    and the Word was God….”

    That makes sense to Bushie too….
    LOL


  4. Bushie

    Wrong! Those kinds of misguidances have only recently informed this lost melenium!

    The first people to have language or words are those in the Kalahari and they still have a click of the tongue when they speak today as to remind us of this factoid.

    The first and last words are theirs!


  5. “Can Bajans survive a potentially decadent decade?”
    They have survived a lot worse on their journey to get here to this present moment

    Never Rub A Dub
    A sound point was made in a robust discussion about this sloppy clumsy journalist fire starter which got got like Tik Tok.


  6. @Wade Gibbons “But if you channel millions of dollars into the path of drug dealers and their violent spawn, what do you expect them to buy? Laptops – to start community projects? Fertilizer and seed – to switch to agriculture?”

    Laptops, seed a fertilizer would be nice, but unlikely to happen.

    It is said that if women have extra money they tend to spend it on health and education stuff for the children.

    Men on tobacco, alcohol, drugs and other such indulgences.


  7. @ “The government has been brilliant with public relations.”

    I disagree.

    I see the government’s PR as piss poor.


  8. Pine mum who ‘doesn’t feel safe any more’ wants out after gunmen fired several shots through house

    Masked gunmen have left a family in The Pine, St Michael, living in fear. And the mother is asking Government to relocate them.

    Eyewitnesses said at least four masked men opened fire at two homes in Stratford Hill and one along Shepton Lane on Thursday night.

    The woman said she was ready to leave the area as neither she nor her children felt safe.

    “It has affected me tremendously. All now I’m still shaking and thinking about how helpless I was and how I could have lost my children. I don’t feel safe here anymore,” she cried out yesterday.

    At left: A window at Shepton Lane damaged by bullets. Inset, the distraught mother showing one of the bullet holes in her home. (CA)

    (Pictures by Shanice King.)

    Please see Page 3.

    SOURCE: NATION


  9. Four youth held in connection with robbery

    Four youngsters appeared in the Holetown Magistrates’ Court yesterday charged in connection with a recent Paynes Bay, St James robbery.

    They are 17-year-old Kyree Jelani Ziare Lopez, of Bagatelle Gardens, and 23-year-old Juannique Gabriel, of Redmans Village, both in St Thomas, along with Ikyah Iroyal Jones, 20, of No. 27 Thorpes Main Road, St James, and 20-year-old Amari Kenyatta Welch, of Block 12B, Bonnetts Housing Area, Brittons Hill, St Michael.

    Welch, Gabriel and Lopez (who is also on a firearm charge), were remanded to Dodds Prison until February 14.

    Jones was released on $25 000 bail. (NS)

    The four youngsters making their way to court yesterday. From left are Ikyah Iroyal Jones, Juannique Gabriel (partially hidden), Amari Kenyatta Welch and Kyree Jelani Ziare Lopez. (Picture by Reco Moore.)

    Source: Nation


  10. Bajans waiting to exhale

    Murder, somebody help me, the calypsonian sang, but the words of men from south of the border reverberate louder across the halls of “injustice” as bloodshed spills into the New Year.

    The bitter taste of the unforgiveable words spoken with straight faces referencing mistrust have sunken into hearts filled with fear as Barbadians again cower under a cloud of uncertainty, while gunmen restart their brazen attacks.

    Barbadians are demanding answers and those who are facilitating the nonsense have to be called out, some say, while questioning the silence of those who like to hear themselves speak.

    Devoid of substance and lacking in action, yet being spread like Saharan dust, are words usually uttered after the blood-letting.

    Many, fed-up and tired of the inertia of the big-ups, are adamant that it was only a matter of time before the pontificating about more boots on the ground, when they had no right being removed or scaled down in the first place.

    Like Rome, the society burns and carries more than a faint smell of suspicion as Nero plays the “fumble” with institutions that care little about offering genuine help for limp economies in a climate-changing era and their rising crime.

    Help, some bolder ones cry, but to whom do they turn? Others ponder about when men in broad daylight feel so entitled that they can go anywhere and terrorise anyone as they snuff out victims, some they pursue, and some innocent bystanders.

    With heavy artillery and seemingly no shortage of ammo, they have adopted different tactics and are more frequently driving around in cars after parking the loud, unlicensed bikes as they make alleged targeted hits.

    Is there any connection between these hits and the charges made by an audacious few who graced a space to speak boldly about broken fiscal arrangements?

    They have now infiltrated hallowed spaces and boldly stride up steps once reserved for only policy-makers and shapers of the future of the Barbadian populace.

    It’s time to hit back and hit back hard, some say, but most are now seeing the reality of the soft approach to crime in a country in which Barbadians and tourists alike could once walk around freely.

    Enter the new “political error”, and out spilled a misguided approach to crime, and embarrassingly so, when men sworn to serve and protect can do neither.

    Harsh words from speakers huddled together in comfort, yet with bated breath a country waits to exhale, hoping for a new approach to a festering, deadly menace in a society in which even respect for law enforcement, who though promising “to get you”, is becoming less and less.

    Crime boast ignored

    Some men who know the law are dumbfounded by credible information that a man shared his premeditated actions before brazenly carrying them out and claiming the life of another.

    Word is that the assailant spoke to a man of great seniority but that man took no action about the threat that would have booked him into a St Philip “hotel”.

    Those in mourning say that had he acted, their colleague would still be alive today.

    Source: Nation


  11. ROME IS BURNING AS THE EMPRESS PONTIFICATES AND MINIONS LOOK ON SHEEPISHLY


  12. “The first and last words are theirs!”
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    @ Pacha
    So are you telling us that these Kalahari people ‘mek demselves’?

    @ David
    Those four ‘youngsters’ making their way to court…
    Wuh they look EXACTLY like our everyday schoolboy, don’t they?
    Can you find any photos of youngsters with decent, well groomed hairstyles being led into court – or is it really true that cleanliness is associated with godliness?

    In the old days, when schools insisted on proper grooming, it was EASY to tell the rebels who would go on to being ‘led into court’…
    Apparently, to remove such ‘discrimination, we now envourage ALL of our young men to compete to win the ‘gangsta look’ competition…

    Our Eddykashun leaders are geniuses … IF the aim is to destroy our future.

    What a curse…
    What a change since ABA (Adams / Barrow / Adams)


  13. It is about leadership.
    Black leader in Africa & diaspora.
    Who is the best?
    Mia Mottley ( Barbados)Vs Traore (Bakino Faso).
    Who is the best ?
    Who had made the greatest transformation?

    https://youtu.be/JvrY23C62bs?si=sECY5oOcE9g8ZonE


  14. @Bush Tea

    The ‘look’ sticks out. The blogmaster is a big fan of deportment. Notty unkept looking heads is a tell tale sign. As a society we continue to push our heads in the sand. Carry on smartly.


  15. The blogmaster has posted many blogs on this hair thing. Every year the rhetoric increases and so does the lawlessness, crime and corruption.


  16. LOL @ David
    What you are missing is that the VERY DEFINITION of a ‘brass bowl’ revolves around the inherent INABILITY to learn from past idiocy.
    Animals like monkeys and blackbirds learn from past errors.. BUT NOT BRASS BOWLS.

    So after the DLP’s housing fiascos, the BLP comes with STEAL, then HOPE, … and when these fail spectacularly, the ‘answer’ is going to be Searles….
    LOL
    – SAME joker who is YET to explain STEAL and HOPE…
    – SAME clown who said $50 million over budget was ‘money well spent’ ( well perhaps a yacht, apartment blocks, and luxury SUVs probably can be so defined)

    More of the same jobby being dumped into BBs, while we admire shiite talk and argue about our flexible constitution, and about Gatherin.
    ….but THAT is the nature of a CURSE!!!

    LOL
    Somebody like dey pray pon we donkey doh!!!


  17. @Bush Tea

    John A mentioned what is happening with Savvy, isn’t Kinch one of the owners of Searles plantation? The blogmaster is willing to be corrected.


  18. Is this growing violent Crime nature or nuture.
    If it is the latter then constant news reporting leads to copy cat crime becoming regular behavior.


  19. “Apparently, to remove such ‘discrimination, we now envourage ALL of our young men to compete to win the ‘gangsta look’ competition…”

    looking or dressing like a gangsta doesn’t make you a gangsta

    the common trope in the west is blacks are violent thugs

    perhaps it is because they are outcasts and stereotyped


  20. Barbados is flat with no significant mountains/forest for criminal to hide.
    Security systems – modern radar can monitor airspace & coast , drones – provide remote aerial surveillance , traffic electronic scanners & cameras can detect false vehicle registration & traffic offences.
    Every citizen should have an electronic passport/driver license/ ID .

    X-ray scanners can detect firearms/ weapons.
    IT tech can unlock phones / computer/ laptop / social media networks of suspects & retrieve vital information.

    Double agents – work with law enforcement in day & criminals at night.

    Crime in now a family business – entire families involved.


  21. @rickross33

    We want things to improve but not give up anything. Lent is on the horizon, hopefully we will see the wisdom in making a personal sacrifice for the benefit of our tiny society.


  22. It appears that the only duck that remains to be plucked is the Housing duck…
    The last new housing duck was at a cost of $7M. There is no cost for this new duck ..
    Announcing a new lame duck
    BarbadosToday epaper 1/18/2025
    HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
    GOVT TO BUILD 600 AFFORDABLE HOMES AT SEARLES
    The government on Friday unveiled plans to build 600 affordable and resilient homes on 18.3 acres of State land in Searles, Christ Church, repurposing land originally earmarked for a school in a bid to tackle the country’s housing shortage.
    Minister of Housing, Lands and Maintenance Dwight Sutherland outlined plans for the development in the House of Assembly which will also include community amenities.
    The houses are to be resistant to fire, termites, water and mould.
    “This draft of vested lands in the National Housing Corporation is in keeping with the focus of this government on building out the housing infrastructure—not only for housing but for affordable and resilient housing,” he said.
    Sutherland told the House that the land, originally acquired by the previous administration in 2016 for the construction of a secondary school, has been reassigned to meet the country’s urgent housing needs: “We have sought to build out the educational infrastructure with a view to allocating schools in various locations. Searles is not one of those locations. So, we have seen it fit to allocate this land for housing.”
    The development will feature a mix of single-family homes, duplexes, quadruplexes and six-plexes, with further plans to include a commercial centre and recreational green spaces.
    Voicing her support for the initiative, Minister of Education and area MP Kay McConney noted the project’s potential to address what she said were long-standing housing challenges in her constituency and across the island.
    “I am told that there will be about 134 lots as part of this housing solution, and the intention is for the homes to be cost-effective,” the St Philip West MP said. “We trust that it will be so for the majority of the people of Barbados and certainly those of St Philip West.”
    McConney commended the houses’ resilient features: “Far too many residents, particularly in my constituency, live in homes damaged by termites or other issues. Some are even afraid to walk in their own homes at night for fear the flooring might collapse under them.”
    She stressed that housing is not just about providing shelter but improving quality of life and family stability.
    “When people live in safe and adequate housing, it reduces overcrowding, improves health, and supports educational outcomes for children,” McConney said. “Studies show that children learn better and families thrive when their living conditions are secure and stable.”
    (SM)


  23. https://youtu.be/Lg0iwv6uLT4?si=qn42-NlijngPjYqv

    See how corruption & tax avoidance robs your country of millions & keep you in perpetual debt..

    Fix security issues, create safe environment, create opportunities for people, provide hope & sense of purpose .
    Only a brain dead government would promote illegal drugs ( cannabis )as a solution/ economy opportunity.
    Only brand dead people would fall for this lie.
    Illegal Drug creates zombies & sex slaves.
    Many of the criminals are semi zombies.

    https://youtube.com/shorts/Ba4CorBaf5E?si=nhkcSCscyP6Qb301


  24. Vote for a CanBajan ?


  25. @David January 18, 2025 at 8:23 am “Notty unkept looking heads.”

    What is notty and unkempt?

    Afric people’s hair is naturally very tightly curled. Bush Tea’s GOD made it so. Are you saying that Bush Tea’s GOD is wrong?

    I haven’t combed or brushed my hair yet this year. Yes I have washed it. When I used to wear locks years would past without my hair being combed, but it was never dirty.

    I did not comb my children’s hair for the first 2 or 3 years of their lives because I cannot bear to make a baby cry, but their hair was never dirty.

    UNCOMBED DOES NOT=DIRTY.


  26. A degrading social compact

    The Barbadian social compact reflected shared values and the viability of its key social institutions that maintained the psychosocial stability of the homeland.

    This article was written and submitted by Ralph Jemmott who is a retired educator and a social commentator.

    The English speaking Caribbean from The Bahamas in the north to Guyana in the south is experiencing what I call a degraded or decomposing social compact. Despite the azure seas, the fresh breezes and the swaying palm trees advertised in the tourism brochures, the region was never totally wholesome.

    Historically, as George Lamming pointed out, the place was not designed a site for living. There was no perception of a Winthropian “Shining City on a Hill”.

    It was a colonial outpost, plantation society conceived for economic exploitation by various European powers.

    Negro slavery in all its often bizarre manifestations was its dominating feature.

    We live in a broken world and the Caribbean is part of that world. Many of the psycho-social factors that ails us emanate from the wider world, be it the drug trade, gun violence, or a demeaning ghettoize culture. However, in spite of our origins as a plantation slave society, the region had developed a regime for living that at least one Caribbean leader has defined in somewhat hyperbolic language as “a civilisation”. That same leader has addressed in very laudable terms what he called “The idea of Barbados” as a kind of special place.

    Psycho-social

    The amalgam of races that inhabit the region has made for a living that could be the envy of many other parts of the world.

    There can be little doubt that much in contemporary Barbadian society reflect an element of psycho-social degradation. The fact that it is much worst elsewhere in the region offers only cold comfort, particularly as we appear to want to embark on a regional unity with freedom of movement that could threaten greater social contagion.

    The fact that Barbados recorded an all time high of 50 murders in 2024 and three in the first three weeks of 2025 must be worrying. The latest at a gas station at Kirtons, St Philip, reflects an ever worsening trend. It took place in broad daylight. Shots appear to have been fired randomly, imperilling the lives of people doing what they do daily, filling up on gas, and the fact that the bullets could have ignited a fire at the gas pumps themselves is extremely worrying. This, just a week after children playing at a playpark in the Pine area were forced to run for safety as gun shots rang out in the vicinity.

    Barbadians now feel decidedly less safe inside and outside of their abodes. Trust has been eroded and replaced by fear and suspicion even as we chatter idly about community and a community spirit.

    Stability

    What I call the Barbadian social compact reflected shared values and the viability of its key social institutions that maintained the psycho-social stability of the homeland.

    In spite of the racial and class divisions, there was to my thinking something of a consensus on fundamentals of what constituted right and good behaviour. The home, nuclear and extended supported the school and the church, more specifically the Sunday School, fervently inculcated foundational virtues in the young. Barbados was not a paradise, but we could keep deviance in check and the courts could deal with the deviant few.

    Sometime in the 1970’s, the consensus began to fissure as external cultural penetrating influences became part of the societal calculus. Concerned primarily with economic growth, myopic administrations of both stripes paid little attention to the island’s psycho-social well being. It was assumed and wrongly so, that social development would be a corollary of economic progress.

    As often happens in small open economies, progress was stunted and development was uneven.

    As Edward Kamau Brathwaite said in “Rights of Passage”, some did well while others were catching hell and generation poverty remained substantial.

    The welfare state gratuitous as it was, could not suffice against a background of economic sluggishness and moral decay.

    The rising tide did not lift all boats. Crime increased and the courts were simply overwhelmed by cases, criminal and civil.

    Barbados was developing a criminal underclass and some say an overclass. The institutions of socialisation began to crumble before our very eyes.

    Schools are squandering their moral authority as home and families disintegrated. For all the talk about community and togetherness one perceives a growing atomisation in a society where people display a diminished and diminishing sense of empathy.

    Today, Barbadians are not a people given to serious introspection.

    Everything is a nine-day wonder fit for the ubiquitous social media. In spite of all the talk about resilience and sustainability, the apparatus of the state appears unable to halt the psycho-social decline.

    Source: Nation


  27. They make plans for us,They want us to believe them, They want us to follow orders and not question them. Covid was a dry run on global compliance. Our behaviors and identities are getting hijacked. Engineered reality is the new normal


  28. AG: ‘Saturated policing’ in the Pine

    “We will not allow any community in Barbados to be held under siege.”

    That was the warning from the Attorney General of Barbados, Dale Marshall.

    He was speaking in light of an upsurge in shooting incidents in The Pine, St. Michael. The latest report suggests that three people were shot in that area on Saturday.

    The Attorney General highlighted some measures which have been put in place to address the recent upsurge in the following statement:

    The new year has begun with gunmen wreaking havoc in the densely populated Pine community. Fortunately, the injuries sustained have not been life-threatening. However, what has been threatened is the ability of the residents to live peacefully in their homes and the be outdoors in the night, as is their right.
    We will not allow any community in Barbados to be held under siege. Not under any circumstances.
    The Police Service has therefore determined that as an immediate response, the Pine areas will see saturated policing. In other words, there will be an increased police presence on the streets in that community. This is of course, in addition to the investigative strategies that are usually employed. This response will certainly place increased pressure on our man-power resources, but this is a necessary step at this stage. There are other matters that are being pursued but those are of course operational matters that are left to the police leadership.
    I have to ask the residents of the Pine to match the Police efforts at making you safe by coming forward with whatever information you may have, no matter how insignificant you may feel it to be. Early information allows the Police Service to be more effective in their efforts and can even help them to prevent these occurrences. This is not an idle statement. On numerous occasions, the police service has been able to take steps to neutralize threats to our communities. Help them to help you!
    From the Government’s side, we are continuing to strengthen the hand of law enforcement in a variety of ways, technical, financial and legislative. We are also working collaboratively with our Caricom sister
    Governments to address the crime issues that we are seeing on the rise across the region.
    The work continues every day at keeping the criminal element in check, and I can never speak about the crime situation without praising the men and women of the Police Service, who put their lives and wellbeing at risk constantly to keep us all safe.

    Source. CBC.BB


  29. @David, AG full of shite. Which drug dealers give politicians election funding? Why they don’t stop interfere with the police and use the wiretapping information they have of drugs deals and their corrupt enablers. Look at the size of the houses, boats, hired cars, stores and Range Rovers drug dealers driving. These jokers playing with our heads. Barbados is now ruled by gangs. I worked with Wade who was an excellent detective. The force gone to the dogs.


  30. 🙎‍Woman Vs 👷‍Man on the Bu

    ♂ “Notty unkept looking heads.”
    ♀ “What is notty and unkempt?”

    Signs You Might Be an Empath
    When it comes to man versus woman reasoning on the Bu
    I am often on the side of Team Tits as I am a Liberal Minded Empath


  31. ROTFLMBAO @ Cuhdear
    “I haven’t combed or brushed my hair yet this year. Yes I have washed it. When I used to wear locks years would past without my hair being combed, but it was never dirty. ”
    (SAYS YOU!! Does a bum ever think himself to be dirty…?)
    ~~~~~~~~~
    look Miss ting..
    Wuh God give you a brain too… and is it MUCH easier to just sit around liming, than to take the stress, time, effort, cost, and inconvenience of learning to develop it to its top potential. SO WHY YOU WENT SCHOOL?

    Yuh get a mouth too… How about not washing or flossing, or getting dental checks because of the costs and discomfort?

    …and why not just sit around all damn day long, … instead of putting all that stress on your two bow feet – running up and down on a ZR??

    Steupsss…
    The purpose of life is to take WHATEVER you have been gifted at birth, and to make your best efforts to MOVE IT TOWARDS Godliness (perfection).

    ‘Godliness’ is NOT reflected in laziness and in ‘whatever-comes-easiest’…
    This is just another foolish OVER-REACTION to the albino-centric grooming standards that brass bowls have come to adopt.
    They do it because it has been EFFECTIVE in establishing their materialistic class structures.
    OUR standards should be even higher – reflecting our RIGHTEOUS connections … if we had those…


  32. Using Bush Baby Logic
    Cuhdear Bajan is a Criminal and Ungodly ever since she threw her comb away and she should be arrested by the Hair Police for her Nappy ‘Fro


  33. ….she should be arrested by the Hair Police for her Nappy ‘Fro
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Not at all…
    However.. your little Aisian donkey WOULD be banned from BU – if Bushie ever get his stinking hands on the ‘pest banner’.. LOL


  34. Actually I was a tiny bit afraid that Bush Tea would arrest me on my way to church this morning with my God given, clean but uncombed hair. Lol!!! Except I have never met a man that I am afraid of. Lol! And oh yes, I showered, used deodorant, brushed my teeth and used floss and mouthwash. But no I did not comb my hair.

    And Bushie no bow legs here. No humped back either. No calcium deficiency because like most country people our family kept cows and on any given day we had many gallons of milk to drink, so very, very strong bones. In my family we tell the story of how our dad fell out of bed in his 90’s and did not break anything. Just got up and went about his day, including climbing a ladder to do some roof work. Strong bones, made strong by milk and plentiful sunshine while working in de ground.

    One sibling even after decades living in the great white north, was advised at 60 something to get a bone density test. Doctor said sibling has the bone density of a 19 year old. True, true stories.

    So de bow legged woman you running after int me.


  35. Uncombed hair does NOT=laziness.

    And I will never, ever hurt babies or make them cry in order to please some antediluvian on the internet.


  36. “Uncombed hair does NOT=laziness.”
    ~~~~~
    So what EXACTLY does it equal to?
    – Showing the world how much you value your appearance and the public presentation of your body and Temple?
    – Is it your endorsement of cultures which, for various reasons, did not have the wherewithal to invest in such luxuries as hair grooming, and in otherwise enhancing their precious holy Temple – as best they could? slavery perhaps…?!!

    Or is it just that multitudes of lazy jokers who have NO IDEA of the VALUE of their physical bodies, and who therefore, eat junk foods, fail to exercise, drink,smoke, prostitute themselves… and can’t be bothered to look like they CARE ABOUT THEMSELVES… have set the trend that you are following?

    It takes time to exercise
    it takes time to eat healthy meals
    it requires effort to ‘look good’..
    BUT these all SIGNIFY a level of SELF-VALUE that justifies those efforts.

    Of course this all sounds like a lotta shiite to Kiki and to other bums and Parros
    LOL
    But to other persons who love and value THEMSELVES, it speaks volumes when we see those who don’t.


  37. Barbados will be renamed Guntown. Shootings everywhere.

    #wegatherin


  38. People push narratives for political motives
    But no names shall be mentioned to protect the guilty perps
    such as Wade Bush David Ralph.. who want everyone to be scared


  39. I get well fed up with bad news and like my news to be positive like me for upliftment.

    For example here’s a sample in the reggae music mix frontline
    Did you any of you know it alls know this
    Biden posthumously pardons civil rights leader Marcus Garvey
    Biden posthumously pardons civil rights leader Marcus Garvey
    Activist who was convicted of mail fraud in the 1920s influenced Malcolm X and other leaders and hundreds of thousands of black people
    Supporters argued that Garvey’s conviction was politically motivated and an effort to silence the increasingly popular leader who spoke of racial pride.
    The Rev Martin Luther King Jr said of Garvey: “He was the first man, on a mass scale and level” to give millions of Black people “a sense of dignity and destiny”.

    Modern Prophet, Prophet Dub, Roots Radics Reggae Rockers Prophecy


  40. @555dubstreet January 20, 2025 at 6:43 am “Wade Bush David Ralph”

    I don’t know who Wade Bush David Ralph is, but I am not afraid of he/she/it.


  41. @ David,

    as long as no white Bajans or tourists get shot the situation will continue.

    Black on black crime is not a problem for the big ups.


  42. Opposition fartys always say crime is getting out of hand and that they will get tough on crime when they get in power, but crime like debt and unemployment goes up up up regardless of whoever is in Government, so their talk is false and so are their reasons and their solutions to real problems


  43. @Hants

    Bajans from all walks of life have been speaking out- unions, private sector, church etc. the challenge seems to be the inability to stem the lawlessness. Unless ordinary people start to speak out nothing will change. The police need information.


  44. @ Kiki
    Do you get paid by the piece, (of shiite that you post to disrupt the flow of any BU post critical of your bosses)… or is it by the net resulting falloff in contributions?

    Modern PR gimmicks and social media stunts such as your dub-based jobby always amuses Bushie…

    Just KNOW that if Bushie ever get de ‘BAN key’ … your donkey will be unemployed…
    LOL

    Bushie don’t mek dat kinda sport…


  45. Perhaps you should keep your own personal religious views to yourself instead of making your beliefs look foolish in the public domain


  46. @Hants
    Isn’t that a shame.
    The valuing of the lives of foreign citizens over that of local.
    We need these folks to spend so that our people have jobs and can live a decent life.
    Decent, but you must be a second class citizen in your own country.

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