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It is a public holiday in Barbados today and it gives many a time to pause from the hectic daily routine, which defines the day for many, including the blogmaster. The timeout has given time to scan the newsfeeds, listen to one or two talk shows and engage in a few leisurely activities.

There was a time not too long ago Barbados earned a reputation as an orderly and well managed country – our public service, education, utilities, even sports programs. One senses that the current state in Barbados is a departure from a time not too long ago.

It is reported the number of vehicles in Barbados is rapidly approaching 200,000. On every street corner there are for sale signs beckoning one and all to buy a used car. The drivers of Zrs and minibuses have become a law onto themselves and many private owners have been modelling the behaviour.

It is generally known that in the month of June the term ‘June rally’ has become a household reference over the years. Car rally events have become hugely popular. In Barbados there is the forerunner event, King of the Hill, that is scheduled end of May. Since the inaugural event in 2008 residents affected by the staging of the King of the have been voicing frustration about the lack of planning which has encroached on the rights of residents to reasonably go about their business.

The blogmaster is sympathetic to both sides of the issue, however, it is clear that logistical challenges experienced yesterday at the King of the Hill event are mere symptoms of a national dysfunction and ineffectual management of our affairs. We observe it daily how we use our roads. Our inability to fix potholes and bridges. We observe it daily at the Pine and other outlets to license vehicles, frequent breakdowns with equipment to process drivers license.

Members of the BU household have traveled overseas to attend live events with thousands of spectators in attendance, and evident at these events is the careful planning that supported quick entry and exit to venues – including visiting restroom facilities and securing refreshment.

The problem is not the racing event, it is the responsibility of the central authorities including conditions for issuing approvals. If the conditions for the approval are not adhered to the authorities should pull the plug in the same was the Barbados Police Service have had to with a ‘few’ shows.

This will not happen in Barbados because we are a country not fully committed to enforcing rules.


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3 responses to “King of the Hill: A case study in CHAOS”


  1. Car racing at “Bushie” Park was, in another epoch, highly popular as well.

    Never figured out why. However, in addition to the race track there were several-times a year rallies, off-road/on-road, throughout the night until the next day. Bizzy Williams was a well-known rallyist then, the history says.

    A White sport generally, it was, but those have always been the people to set up these kinds of cultures, supportive of enclaves, expats, etc. Accompanied by the expected retinues of Blacks until the coffee was too strong.

    So, might these not also have led the degeneration now oft complained about? Could the much vaunted “minibus sub-culture” not be a function thereof? How many more years would it take for us to accept that those days of yore are dead? Is it not nostalgic, as once retorted, for Bajans of a “certain age” and therefore a given respectability disposition to reach backward for an ellusive bygone era?

    For example, was it not White who were largely responsible for poisong the political culture with the bribery of Blacl politicians instead of contesting elections themselves, maybe absent Phillip Goddard.

    Has anybody ever interrogated the architecture of local Whiteness to see whether there are any clues to help us understand the perceived societal degeneration? Or are Black people best defined in simplistic terms as thought percieved national negative sub-cultures have no antecedents?


  2. For example, was it not White who were largely responsible for poisong the political culture with the bribery of Blacl politicians instead of contesting elections themselves

    XXXXXXXXX

    VERY TRUE AND PRECISE OBSERVATION ON THE 2X3 ISLAND.

  3. Viterose Elaine Vsn Huis Avatar
    Viterose Elaine Vsn Huis

    “A country not fully committed to enforcing rules”. I am a returning Barbadian, and the lawlessness I find here is appalling. Bus stops are irrelevant. Why must I go to the bus stop when the minibus will pick me up and drop me off wherever I want? When I stop a minibus, and it stops in the middle of the road, I refuse to get on the bus. In my opinion, bus stops are small but simple evidence of law and order in a community.

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