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Barbados’ current governance reality leads to a predictable conclusion: the constitutional system is no longer capable of delivering the checks, balances, or institutional independence that a functioning parliamentary democracy requires. When the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) wins three consecutive general elections, each producing a 30–0 sweep, and then adds two by‑election victories to the mix, the problem is not electoral popularity. The problem is that the system has no structural safeguards to prevent the total consolidation of political power – a de facto dictatorship. A Westminster democracy assumes the existence of an Opposition, independent oversight bodies, a Senate capable of scrutiny; a formal structure to accommodate a dissenting voice. Barbados now operates without any of these checks and balances. This cannot be denied.

The vacancy of the Auditor General (AG) since April 2025 is one of the most alarming indicators. The Auditor General is our primary independent watchdog over public spending, procurement, state‑owned enterprises (SOEs), and compliance with financial rules. When the AG office remains vacant for more than a year, it means the government is effectively spending public money without the constitutionally required independent audit. It means no timely annual reports. It means parliament, and the public, cannot see how millions of dollars are being utilised. In a democracy this should be a governance crisis. In a small state with a long record of SOE losses, procurement weaknesses, and fiscal vulnerabilities, it is a direct threat to accountability and a fragile democracy that requires unwavering vigilance..

Compounding this is the fact that the President is a former BLP party Cabinet minister responsible for appointing independent senators. Barbados’ Constitution expects the President to act as a non partisan actor. The perception by the public of his independent role is opened to question. Even if he acts with complete integrity, the optics undermines public trust. To compound the issue, when “independent” senators consistently vote with the government, the Senate ceases to function as a reviewing chamber.

The Public Accounts Committee (PAC), the body meant to scrutinise government spending, cannot function under the current arrangement. The PAC must be chaired by the Leader of the Opposition, but when the government holds all 30 seats, there is no Opposition and therefore no PAC. This means Barbados has no parliamentary oversight of public expenditure. No questioning of ministries. No examination of SOEs. No accountability for cost overruns, procurement failures, or fiscal risks. A democracy without a functioning PAC is a democracy without brakes. Some will say that even when we had elected Oppositions there were no checks and balances. When we had a working Leigh Trotman, he was described as a toothless tiger, so what!.

All of this is happening while the country’s new Constitution remains unimplemented. Barbados declared itself a republic in 2021 with the promise of constitutional reform – five years later, the old constitutional framework is being stretched beyond limits.

Barbados’ governance system is structurally incapable of protecting the public interest under conditions of one party dominance. The Constitution was designed for a competitive two party era that no longer exists. The institutions meant to provide oversight like the Auditor General, Senate, PAC are vacant, compromised, or powerless.

A reminder: democracy rarely collapses in a dramatic moment. It erodes quietly when watchdogs fall silent, when oversight bodies go unfilled, and when those in power become comfortable.

Are we there yet?


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38 responses to “How BLP dominance erodes Barbados’ democratic institutions”


  1. Is it ‘BLP’ dominance…?
    Or Mugabe dominance ?
    – as was warned by Piece uh de Rock for YEARS here on BU?
    What a place!!


  2. If Mottley were to run as an independent what would be her political career?

    No need to split hairs, it is always the paramountcy of the party in our system of government.


  3. A methodology for the acquisition of votes. 100 dollars per month.

    https://nationnews.com/2026/05/08/tudor-more-urged-to-register/#


  4. These recitations again seem to locate causation entirely within a set of local contexts.

    So it doesn’t matter that, for example, public pension systems in a number of countries have exhibited the same or similar trajectories of declines, nearing failures.

    Democracy seems to have different meanings around the world even as it here escapes a definition. We are thus left to presume that certain enactments by officials, institutions and publics constitute what ‘democracy’ should be, as meaning. These types of descriptions always suggest to this writer that the democracy being talked about is a petite-bourgoise institution merely serving the maintenance of that social class.

    Clearly, that petite-bourgoise democracy has long started to lose currency. In the case of the European Unión, for example, the petite-bourgoise democracy was made a serve American imperialism. As a result, it lacked meaning to local peoples, produced cadres of elites totally lacking any vision of a region without the hegemon and has thus have thrown all kinds of deviations which, not unlike the centre, suggest other tendencies. Maybe even those of a Fourth Reich.

    In Barbados, these general tendencies were mandated by neoliberalusm and as a result the NNIS, especially within the case where democracy is best described in terms of economy, has made certain that public welfare institutions were hollowed out in the service of local and global elites.

    Weeee suggest that the governance tendencies of the West and those influenced by it are turning back all of the gains made by the masses of peoples over the last century or more.

    In these circumstances, petite-bourgoise democracy could only have descended into more vicious forms. Obviously, the appearance of an elected dictatorship in Barbados is best understood as a consequence of these and other forces.

  5. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    The neutering of the entities which oversaw the checks and balances began long before this current administration. They have merely continued along that path, with arguably, some acceleration.
    Yet once you realise, you can get away and there are no consequences, why stop?
    The PACs didn’t function well, even when there was an Opposition. As one blogger would remind me, when I complained the legally required Reporting wasn’t working, even when it functioned the Reports led to little.
    Possibly this rise in violence, may translate more broadly, the challenge is those types are no more desirous of accountability and transparency than the elected.
    As noted elsewhere, who gives a shit?
    But Bajans find comfort in knowing, it en jus bout hey, it happening everywhere. In some cases, it can be argued Bim is a leader.


  6. There was a time when people talked about “democracy indices”, White people mainly, and their Black lackeys as well.

    There’s not much talk about that these days.

    The recent outcomes of the local elections in a feeble Britian clearly indicate that Starmer is a dead man walking, in Big England. Even as the Europeans resusitate discourses about the recolonialization of Afrika.

    It was Starmer, similar to Mottley, who won a less than two years old general election to unseat the feckless Conservatives. Even as his party, Labour, is as Zionist as the Zionists themselves. Even after a genocide.

    The Conservatives, who were forced to change their prime minister three or four times within months, previously, and before the foolish electorate finally put them out of their misery.

    That the nincompoop Farage performed best, his party not even being one of the top three in parliament prior, is additional guidance that none of the actors within this democratic global farce has a clue as to what de feck dey doing, to quote Drumpf.

    And in this we mean the populations of voters, the same types of misleadership class members in all parties, nor the moneyed men or other special interests apparachets within the belly of the beast, and others, know not one shiiite about the religion called democracy as it becomes an untamed beast.

    Dey like Bushie, barely performing all kinds of enactments, almost reflexively; reading foolishness and dreaming about a land of milk and honey in the clouds while Pacha getting his right here, right now!

    Western styled democracy is dead. Permit it to have an eternal rest. While a rendition of “Abide With Me” is mournfully sung by the most melodious chour of drunkened men, harmonizing gloriously in the call and response from Afrika, in the rum shop down dey.

  7. Chatty Chatty Avatar
    Chatty Chatty

    problems with the internet listed below ⬇️

    <blockquote

    too much politics..

    … gutter press drag political debate in the public sphere down into the sewer, to the advantage of the far right and fascism. …

    it is better to be like the young who are not really political but party proper

    instead of the disgruntled vexed and old
    who’re watching this chatting that
    officious contentious gravalicious stone faced


  8. @NO

    Yes, when the PAC. AG’s office were running we had ‘different’ challenges but at least the entity was ‘working’, if feebly, but a better starting point. As David Ellis has been opining recently, when our entities are allowed to decay, what will be left?

    Another WTF moment is the Alleyne fellow leaving the Chair of the Electoral Boundaries Commission and being appointed to the Senate without too much whisper.

  9. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @David
    “The Alleyne fellow,” was also chair of the SSA, BPI and I believe a director on several other public Boards. Some might say a natural transition?
    Didn’t EWB warn, one morning one will awake and discover the land of our ancestors is no longer ours?
    The first failure to report by the NIS way back when OSA was PM was a moment. Who could have imagined the stakeholders would never see another Annual Report again? And that Non-reporting virus would spread to numerous other public bodies. And then the AUD Gen office would disappear. And after, annual filings of any measure would become a joke, because years after there would supplementary filings, changing all the numbers previously reported.
    And few would be concerned. Many would not even know. You said it best…who gives a shit?


  10. @NO

    The Electoral Boundaries Commission was singled out because of what it represents in our governance system. If our government is prepared to trivialize the role the EBC plays, what could be next? Let us not forget his predecessor was Leslie Haynes?

  11. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Lol…the website
    https://www.ebc.gov.bb/the-electoral-boundaries-commission-2/
    Claims Haynes 2, is still the Chair.
    What could be next? Oh shirt, I’m not taking that bait.


  12. Well, it seems like the Greens and Reform share the electoral prize in the UK. As results become clear.

    Labour has taken an historic drubbing. The SNP in Scotland consolidates its hold on power there. Starmer insisting on holding on, for now. He’ll soon have to response to the torrent on his side looking for an exit, for him!

    Nothing changes as socalled democracy trots out this pantomime to cast dust into the eyes of the gullible, the democratic supplicants but better called political religious slaves.

    For the Greens in Europe have long devolved into the most idiotic of all. These fools still promote the notion that animals must not be produced for human consumption. That insects should replace cows, for example. Veganism, unlike the democratic political religion, should not be about such systems of personal control.

    This entire political slate needs to be wiped clean. The party system has become inert! All party systems.


  13. @NO

    Too many government websites need updating, this a lack of efficiency which is emblematic of the service they deliver to taxpayers.


  14. Today is the anniversiry of the victory by the Western Axis in what the Russian Federation calls The Great Patriotic War.

    A war in which 30 million Soviets died fighting against Nazism and Fascism especially defending against Operation Barbarosa, as the Nazis called it.

    And yet 81 years later, the Russian Federation has been again beset by these very forces of governance in the hands of a different constelation of proxy forces.

    Seventy million died in the Great Patriotic War. Included, were 20 million Chinese dead in the Pacific Theatre. Whereas, the Americans, for example, only lost 500 thousand in their double-dealing effort to tame the very fascist beast they had created.

    Even immediately after the war the Americans and the British had advanced plans to invade a weakened Soviet Unión, even as they continued throught their intelligence agencies to support the Nazi and the Fascist elements left behind for decades afterwards. These are the Ukrainians, the Baltics states today, their peoples.

    Under Operation Paperclip, America brought Nazis and Fascists to the Western Hemisphere to save them from justice, to power their military, their space program, and why would have their leading agent, Adolf Hitler not have been a prime target for such a transfer?

    If there is one lesson we can all learn from history, the present and the future, it certainly must be the undeniable truism about governance is that all-three are one. The real 3-in-one!

    Certainly, the Russian Federation must not be called upon again to save the world from the excesses of governance of its own making, must it be?


  15. A shoutout to veteran David Ellis for his kind words about Barbados Underground’s work on air yesterday.


  16. Invest ing in Barbados.

    “Porsche 992 Rally GT backed by Rock Hard Cement, Bushy Park Barbados, MJT FBO, Stone Atelier, Flo and Maloney Racing”


  17. @Hants

    Had a look at his performances in Formula E, doesn’t seem to be doing well.


  18. “I understand that the Bdos govt had talks with the IMF. I believe the talks centered on my interests. The following issues most likely came up in the talks. (1) Our bad debt crisis. (2) Our weak one leg economy. (3)The on going problems of the SOES: Water Authority, Transport Board, particularly, the confusion about PRIVATIZATION of the CHINESE BUSSES. (4) The widely discussed issue of govt using money from the CONSOLIDATED FUND to give to “Unknown Investors”. (5) The cost of FLY OVERS. (6) Urgent NEED to diversify the economy. (7) The serious implications of crime for the economy. (8) SUGAR. (9)The VERY large size of the cabinet in parliament. These are a few. But I wondered for many years if these types of discussions cannot be shared with citizens, given the gravity of the economic development problems we will always face as a SMALL, OPEN, foreign exchange constrained economy.

    PROFESSOR MICHAEL HOWARD.”


  19. Western …….Alliance ….. Allies


  20. Upside, downside of Central Bank report

    This article was written and submitted by Anthony P. Wood, economist and former lecturer in economics, banking and finance at the Cave Hill Campus of the University of the West Indies. He is also a former Government minister under the Barbados Labour Party.

    Governor of the Central Bank, Dr The Most Honourable Kevin Greenidge, in his customary upbeat style, presented on April 29 a very positive assessment of the performance of the Barbadian economy during the first quarter of 2026.

    Specifically, he noted the economy was in an excellent position, with real growth of 1.7 per cent during the quarter, falling debt as indicated by a debt to (nominal) gross domestic product ratio of 94.6 per cent, low inflation at 1.1 per cent, unemployment rate of 7.2 per cent, and international reserves of $3 billion, representing 25.5 weeks of import cover.

    Despite the optimistic assessment by Dr Greenidge, a close examination of the economic situation is warranted. First, the prediction of a slowdown in growth of the economy during 2026 by the World Bank and the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) was manifested in the first-quarter performance. The 1.7 per cent growth was less than the 2.6 per cent achieved during the first quarter of 2025 and the 2.7 per cent for the 12 months in 2025.

    Second, growth in the economy continues to be driven mainly by tourism and, to a lesser extent, construction. However, there was a slowdown in growth in activity in these dominant sectors. Longstay arrivals increased by 1.1 per cent during the first quarter of 2026 compared to 2.4 per cent for the same period in 2025. However, the strong performance in cruise tourism continued. Cruise arrivals increased by 30 per cent in the first quarter of 2026, slightly down from 37.1 per cent for the same period a year earlier.

    Growth in the construction sector in the first quarter of 2026 was 3.5 per cent compared to 6.4 per cent for the same period in 2025. Construction activity continues to be concentrated on tourismrelated projects located on the coastline.

    Such building activity, which is a demonstrative symbol of the country’s dependence on the competitive tourism industry, is associated with important concerns, including the potential disruption to the industry (and economy) resulting from climate-related events affecting the coastline, restricting the access of locals to beaches, and the pressure on locals to sell their property located in the environs of the hotels because of the sizeable increase in land tax valuations.

    Coastline

    The downside to the policy of concentrating the expansion of the tourism industry on the coastline was highlighted in a recent article, which noted that “around the world, from the Mediterranean to parts of California, building on the “land side” is a standard economic and social model. In Barbados, we treat it like a radical, business-killing fantasy”.

    The performance of the agricultural sector mirrored that of tourism and construction. Growth slowed from 13.3 per cent during the first quarter of 2025 to 4.1 per cent for the corresponding period of 2026.

    It is informative to note that agriculture continues to make a marginal contribution to gross national output. Hence, the addition to national output from an increase in the sector of 4.1 per cent will be insignificant and have a negligible impact on the mounting food import bill.

    The other productive sectors of the economy continue to underperform. The once-thriving international business sector showed signs of contraction and output in the manufacturing sector declined by 2.3 per cent.

    The review of the sectoral performance indicates the economy remains over-reliant on the tourism sector, which renders it susceptible to unfavourable economic and geopolitical developments that may disrupt international travel. Of particular concern is the inflationary impact of the ongoing war in the Middle East on the airline industry.

    Third, the slowdown in growth of the economy was reflected in the employment situation. The unemployment rate increased from an historic low of 6.1 per cent at June 30, 2025, to 7.2 per cent at December 31, 2025. Also, youth unemployment remains in the neighbourhood of 20 per cent.

    The tightening of the labour market means that limited employment opportunities are available for the reported 14 758 CARICOM nationals from Belize, Dominica, and St Vincent and the Grenadines moving to Barbados since the operationalisation of the free movement arrangement involving the four countries on October 1, 2025. The unemployment situation will be exacerbated in a few months with the thousands of graduates from Cave Hill Campus of the University of the West Indies and other educational institutions seeking employment opportunities.

    Fourth, the international reserves of $3 billion, which represent 25.5 weeks of import cover, allow the authorities to respond in a timely manner to exogenous shocks to the economy. However, it should be noted that the reserves at the end of the first quarter of 2025 were $3.4 billion, equivalent to 32.4 weeks of import cover.

    Inflation

    Fifth, the moderation of inflation to 1.1 per cent is encouraging news. This means that the rate at which prices in a general sense increase has declined to 1.1 per cent. However, the high food prices and high cost of living remain burdensome for less financially-abled families.

    Sixth, the notion that the country’s debt has fallen during the first quarter, as indicated by a debt to nominal gross domestic product (GDP) ratio of 94.6 per cent at March 31, 2026, is a convenient simplification.

    Debt and debt to GDP ratio are not the same measures. The level of public debt is a stock variable and is defined as the total outstanding principal owed by the Government at a specific point in time. It indicates the level of the country’s indebtedness. Conversely, the debt to GDP ratio is an indicator of the country’s ability to repay its debt.

    Using the two terms synonymously should be discontinued. A country repays its absolute value of debt over time through amortisation and interest payments, irrespective of the movement in the debt to GDP ratio.

    The fixation of assessing the debt management policy by the movement in the debt to GDP ratio, rather than the absolute level of debt, has resulted in persistence with an excessive borrowing policy by the Mottley administration. Thus, Barbados has the unenviable record as the most highly indebted country in CARICOM with a debt to GDP ratio of 94.6 per cent, and a speculative credit rating.

    At the conclusion of the debt restructuring/debt default exercise in late 2018, the debt level declined precipitously from $15.84 billion to around $11.7 billion. However, despite repayments in excess of $11 billion over the last seven and three-quarter years, the Government’s voracious appetite for borrowing resulted in the debt increasing to more than $15 billion at March 31, 2026.

    It should be noted that the decline in the “celebrated” debt to GDP ratio from 117 per cent after the debt restructuring/debt default exercise in late 2018 to 94.6 per cent at March 31, 2026, resulted exclusively from an increase in nominal gross domestic product, which was influenced in a disproportionate way by inflationary conditions during the period and the rebasing of GDP.

    Finally, an area of concern is the almost exclusive emphasis on the primary balance – the difference between Government revenue and spending excluding interest payments on debt. This measure masks the country’s overall public finance situation, especially when large interest payment obligations are associated with high debt.

    A strong primary surplus of $647 million (four per cent of GDP) was reported for the financial year 2025-2026. However, when interest payments are included, the overall position (on an Accountant General basis) moves from a surplus to a deficit of around 11 per cent of GDP.

    This deficit reflects the administration’s runaway expenditure policy supported by excessive borrowing, and is well in excess of the recommended three per cent of GDP for orderly economic management.

    Despite the Central Bank Governor’s interpretation of the significance of the selective macroeconomic variables and his assessment that the economy is in an excellent position, he acknowledged that “the task ahead is to translate solid policy into tangible outcomes: higher productivity, higher quality employment, enhanced resilience and improved living standards”. There seems to be internal inconsistency in the words of the Governor.

    Source: Nation

  21. Terence Blackett Avatar
    Terence Blackett

    I LOVE BRITISH POLYTRICKS – WISH I COULD SAY THE SAME 4 BARBADOS

    The British public is about to “PUSH” #PMStarmer over the “BRINK”!!!

    A “HUGE” mandate at the last (S)election – a complete disaster @ Council election on 7 May & LABOUR* is up #SchittCreek without a paddle…

    PM HIER STARMER MUST BE GONE THIS WEEK

    #NextOnePlease


  22. Perception matters: growth few can feel

    THE LATEST CENTRAL BANK review points to 20 consecutive quarters of expansion, low inflation and declining debt. The Government says the fundamentals are strong. And yet, Barbadians are saying something very different: “We are not feeling it”.

    That tension is not anecdotal.

    It is society speaking through lived experience.

    As captured in the SUNDAY SUN of April 3, citizens are not disputing that growth exists; they are questioning whether it exists in their lives. One respondent put it bluntly: “Whatever little income I have has to stretch a very long way”. Another described growth as “pretty talk” because “nothing has changed for poor people”. These are distributional signals.

    The disconnect between growth and felt reality can be understood through three interrelated dynamics: the structure of growth, the price of survival and the politics of measurement.

    First, the structure of growth in Barbados is highly concentrated.

    Tourism is the principal driver. But tourism-led growth is not translating into broad-based income gains.

    Tourism is a sector characterised by leakages, segmentation and uneven value capture. A significant share of earnings flows out through imports, foreign ownership and profit repatriation. Within the domestic economy, the gains are unevenly distributed across skill levels, asset ownership and firm size. High-end tourism growth coexists with stagnant wages in lower-tier service jobs.

    Even as gross domestic product (GDP) rises, the income share accruing to the median household is declining. Growth is happening – but somewhere else.

    This is why the “trickle-down” intuition expressed by citizens is so important. One interviewee noted that growth “appears to benefit a small percentage . . . maybe the top end”. That is not simply perception; it reflects a structural feature of the growth model.

    Second, even where incomes are rising, they are outpaced by the cost of living. This is the inflation paradox currently confronting Barbados.

    Headline inflation is low, but the composition of price changes matters more than the average.

    Households do not consume a statistical basket; they consume groceries, utilities, transport and housing. If those categories are rising – even modestly – while wages are flat or marginally increasing, then real purchasing power declines.

    The article repeatedly returns to this theme: “Prices continued to rise and everyday expenses were becoming harder to manage”. Another respondent highlighted that families are “living pay cheque to pay cheque” despite multiple income sources. That is a classic signal of cost-of-living stress, not macroeconomic failure, but distributional imbalance.

    In simple terms, growth is being eaten by prices.

    Third, there is a deeper issue about how we measure economic success. GDP growth captures the total value of output, not its distribution nor the quality of jobs created. An economy can grow even while a large share of the population feels economically insecure.

    This is where the politics of measurement become critical. When policymakers emphasise aggregate indicators – growth rates, reserves, debt ratios – they are speaking the language of macroeconomics.

    When citizens respond with stories of hardship, they are speaking the language of economic welfare.

    The two are not the same.

    The risk, if this gap persists, is not just economic – it is political.

    When people repeatedly hear that the economy is improving but do not experience improvement, Government’s credibility erodes.

    Economic narratives sound detached from reality. And once that happens, even genuine progress is discounted.

    This is why the disconnect matters. There are also secondary factors amplifying the perception gap.

    High taxation, as mentioned by one respondent, affects disposable income directly. Infrastructure concerns – such as road conditions – shape daily experience of the economy. Crime was also identified, not only on quality of life but on tourism sustainability itself. All demonstrate how citizens “feel” the economy.

    What we are observing is not a contradiction between growth and hardship. The contradiction surrounds the type of growth: narrow, externally propelled and weakly transmitted into household welfare.

    The implication is not that growth is irrelevant. It is that growth alone is insufficient.

    If Barbados is to close this gap, the focus must shift from growth rates to growth transmission. How does growth translate into higher real wages? How does it generate domestic supply chains that retain value? How does it reduce cost-of-living pressures? Once again, I return to the Government’s strategic framework declared in May 2023: Mission Barbados. If it is to be meaningful, its implementation must specify the channels through which growth improves lives. It must target diversification. It must align fiscal policy, industrial strategy and social protection around measurable improvements in household welfare.

    Because the truth is not that Barbadians are rejecting growth.

    They are rejecting a version that bypasses them.

    Professor Troy Lorde is an economist and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of the West Indies Cave Hill Campus. Email troy.lorde@cavehill.uwi.edu

    Source: Nation


  23. The allegations levelled against one of the greatest parties in human history are completely unfounded.

    At no other time in the history of this island has there been such a close bond between leader and people, state and party.

    Everyone admires us for our efficient government. Governing no longer requires lengthy debates in Parliament, but rather the iron will of a leader.

    Nevertheless, I too hope that we will soon have a New Order as our new constitution. Not to correct the current political status, but to safeguard it permanently against any treacherous opposition.

    Tron
    Secret State Councillor


  24. Steupsss!!
    Lotta shiite!
    Trump is also saying how great America is doing…
    How well his war is going…
    How masterfully his tariffs have performed…
    …and that he barely knew Epstein.

    Why Prof Lorde even bothers to legitimize Greenidge’s nonsense with an academic response is beyond Bushie… perhaps a slow day for topics and a tight schedule?

    When we see charlatans pontificating such OBVIOUS shiite talk, and so openly, and publicly, it is a clear indication of what they think of ordinary (and even extra-ordinary) brass bowl citizens.

    All this is ONLY possible when such lies originate at the VERY TOP of the pinnacle of ‘power’… and where everyone is afraid to tell the Emperor of their nakedness – until AFTER they too are discredited (like MTG of Georgia, and some of our very own former DLP clowns)

    Ultimately, the REAL problem is that our world is now under the full control of dark principalities, powers, and the rulers of the darkness of this world, and the purveyors of spiritual wickedness in high places.
    There should be no surprise therefore that such BLATANT lying, false promises, deceit, and lack of integrity are now GLOBAL in scope…and so similar in nature…

    LOL…
    This deceit is SO BAD, that a book (that Pacha avoids like the plague) tells us that …
    IF IT WAS POSSIBLE … EVEN the very ELECT would also be deceived.

    IF IT WAS POSSIBLE!!!
    …that is the only reason they can’t trick de stinking adoptee called Bushie…
    LOL
    ha ha ha!!

    What a book!!


  25. @Bush Tea May 11, 2026 at 6:49 am

    I will pray for you, that you may finally see the light of truth. You must free yourself from your hatred and open your heart. Then you will realise that you are not fighting against Mia Mottley, but against your own inner doubts.

    Anyone who is at peace with the world and with oneself must love Barbados and its great leader.

    Tron


  26. The hatred in Bushie’s heart is admittedly intense and unquenchable….
    Bushmen hate all kinda shiite…. DEEPLY!
    It is an allergy.

    So what are you going to pray?
    … that Bushie comes to get a liking for wunna jobby and brassbowlery..?
    … that lies, false promises, and lack of transparency become ‘the light of truth’?
    … that Bushie shares your passion for the shitty koolaid?

    Besides, …who yuh going pray to bozie…?
    Wuh you even know Bushie’s step-fadda?!!

    If you think that Bushie hates the lotta shiite…
    You should check out just how VEX the bushman’s step-fadda is right now hear!!…

    …and wunna donkeys going find out just now – EXACTLY how vex HE is…!!!

    Yuh betta pray for you own BB burro…
    …and fuh the lotta mules that you worship.
    – and stop worrying bout stinking Bushie… LOL


  27. Jesus was a Buddhist and a Man of Peace who practiced Ahimsa*

    (*) Ahimsa is the ancient Indian ethical principle of non-violence, non-injury, and reverence for all living beings, central to Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. Literally translating to “absence of injury,” it means avoiding harm to any creature—including humans, animals, and nature—through actions, words, and thoughts.

    @ David there is a massage in your bucket with a message for the Ras Jahziel

  28. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    At least Prof Lorde is speaking as to his perception of public sentiment. He is entitled to do so.
    To attempt analysis of a bunch of numbers we know are incorrect, is a waste of time.
    Many were under the misguided notion, that because Barbados was in an IMF program, the IMF somehow provided oversight. Hence there was validity in the numbers. The IMF program ends, and in months we discover $1.6 Billion in expenses over the last 3 years, which occured, but were as yet, not formally approved. Ooops? What an oversight!!!
    We should beg the GoCB to re-issue his reports given the additional expenses? Good luck 😭😭
    All good theatre. Once we understand it such, all is good.


  29. @ NO
    The sugar industry divestment scam is the clearest proof that the IMF is either complicit in the anti BB brassbowlery … or they are just as incompetent as our local scammers.

    The whole game is a money scam, with new loans being used to roll over old loan payments – in a micro mimic of the USA’s un-repayable bond market.

    The love of money is the root of all evil, and if you cannot be productive, then you have to prostitute, beg, borrow or starve.


  30. I suggest we hand the keys to the Treasury back to the Highly Honourable Senator Christopher Sinckler, so that he can fire up the cash printing machinery again … It shouldn’t take that long to print 1.6 billion, should it? Of course, our foreign exchange reserves will eventually run down to zero. But haven’t I always been an advocate of a sharp devaluation, or to put it more politically correctly: a ‘patriotic currency adjustment’?

    Tron

  31. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Bushie
    These are highly competent persons. They can steal you and your family’s future right out from under your nose, and you don’t do shite.
    The book you so love cannot help. The Crucifix many of them wear, suggests they are part of your team.
    Whether the IMF are complicit, or just stupid, makes no difference. It is the Barbadian taxpayers who live there, who use the various services, who are happy.
    Obviously “we like it so” or there would be change?


  32. ‘Obviously “we like it so” or there would be change?”
    ~~~~~~~~~~~
    LOL @ NO
    Change shiite!!
    You really don’t know brass bowl Bajans yuh…
    You forget that it took us 400 years to work out that slavery was a bit one-sided;
    50 years to figure out that our lawyers are just parasites; 40 to grasp that politics is all about image; and 62-love to realize that many hands cannot make one shiite work.

    Our idea of ‘change’ is a pocket of coins…
    or at best, a new set of political scammers with new lies and false promises.

    But yea! we like it so…


  33. Politicians always talk about ‘change’
    but is is just a vacuous soundbite
    they never say what their changes might be


    ain’t shit* changing
    it ain’t shit*
    I thought you knew
    I know shit* don’t change

    (*) saying ‘shit’ is ok on the BU as it DK’s new phrase
    DLP have been quite quiet as of late not a peep from George st


  34. @tron, the largesse, free food and the big mouth drinks have really brought your blind loyalty. When are you going to get your eyes checked and mental evaluation


  35. You Tube.

    Captain Sawyer – Mia Sweet (Crop Over 2026)

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