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Columns

Help Connie Campbell to sing again

Mark Wignall

Sunday, March 28, 2010



THE little country church in the sleepy, deep rural district of Clapham was filled to capacity on that rainy evening 10 years ago.

It was Miss Eva's funeral and it seemed as if every household had emptied itself to attend. I sat on a hard church bench like everyone else as Connie, one of Miss Eva's grandchildren, walked past the casket and up to the pulpit to sing in honour of the widely loved matriarch of the Wallace family.

Connie was 20-something and just a little slip of a girl. As country funerals go, I expected nothing more than the usual -- droning hymns and overdone speeches. And then Connie began to sing and the church, including myself, wondered how such a giant of a voice could come from such a small body.

I was stunned because her voice was 'off the charts', meaning it had that quality that immediately made one say, "Why is she not earning millions making recordings?" Halfway through the song Connie broke down in tears and was unable to continue. I must confess that in the years which followed I lost track of her. I know she was a back-up singer for Luciano and other headliners, had a daughter and travelled extensively as she gathered credits for the full launch of her solo career. In recent times she did back-up for Shaggy and was well on her way to stardom until tragedy struck in a most brutal and unexpected way.

On August 23 last year she was at the Crossroads Entertainment Complex in Maryland. Minutes before she was due to perform she had a seizure. Everyone was shocked because Connie took the view that what others tended to do in the rough world of entertainment was not necessarily her way. She therefore shunned the world of drugs and heavy drinking. At 34 years old Connie was diagnosed as having suffered from a brainstem stroke. Connie has Locked-in Syndrome -- LIS -- she hears everything, is able to react to some commands, but is unable to speak.

Her health insurance has since been used up by the hospital, which included costs for time in the ICU of up to US$5,000 per day. Connie should have been transferred to a rehabilitation facility from September 17 as she needs speech, vent-weaning care, and long-term occupational and physical therapy. The brain stem takes six to nine months to regrow and rehab will be for one to two years, depending on her response to treatment.

Proposals from rehab facilities ask for US$90,000 down payment as security, and monthly amounts of US$45,000.

These amounts are not petty, but doctors are of the view that Connie's youth is a factor in her recovery. That will, however, take time. Her sister Sandra Campbell, a life underwriter with Sagicor, and someone whom I have known all of her life, said, "Her neurologists state that because she has youth in her favour she has a great chance, but her recovery will take time, and as the family is experiencing, it takes money for her recovery.

"I have personally met with Dr Trevor McCartney CMO, physiatrist Dr Paula Dawson, and spoken to senior personnel at the KPH about her return to a Jamaican facility. Her move here, they said, is not advisable as the hospitals do not have adequate facilities and human resources for a patient needing long-term ventilator support and rehabilitation.

"I am asking for assistance... as every bit counts. Connie has an 11-year-old daughter, Gianni, who is now in my care, and consistently dreams of her mother's return.

"We have formed the CONNIE CAMPBELL FOUNDATION with accounts at RBTT, Dominica Drive: Ja Sav Ac# 44103172004606326 and US Sav Ac# 10317200406318."

To compound matters, Connie's family is under stress from the courts. Said Sandra, "I am to attend court in Maryland in April, as the hospital is suing for monies owed and are applying to the courts for custody of Connie, so they can make decisions on her behalf. If I get her in a rehab facility, the attorney said, the case will be dropped."

I am asking readers to assist, not because Connie can and will sing again, not because she is one of us, not because she brought joy into the lives of those who heard her and knew her, but because life is tenuous and we are all subject to its unpleasant surprises.

Please, do all you can to give some help and make Connie sing again.

Does the JLP need Black Leadership?

A political party's main product is not its policies, it is instead its leader; and that leader, once agreed on and chosen, or, to use the politically correct euphemism, elected, that leader must be the best salesman in selling himself to the electorate.

The vast majority of our people are black-skinned and over the years they have elected leaders who look nothing like them. In colonial times and just beyond that, enough of us found favour with the brown man Bustamante to eventually make him Jamaica's first prime minister.

It is my view that when our people did this, as uneducated and poor as they were, for the times, they were not into the business of fooling themselves into believing that a black leader could get for them more than what a high-brown man could achieve. Plus, Busta communicated well with his targeted audience.

In 1972 another great communicator, Michael Manley, rose to political power with much heraldry. The people loved him, the women adored him and he wallowed in it until he moved beyond what he could realistically deliver. In 1980 when the political crescendo spilled over, Eddie Seaga, a white man, was catapulted to power. His communication skills never received better than a 'good' rating but, at the time, he was the master of selling the people on the dangers of the 'other side'. He was never liked because he came across as too much of a cold planner. Some took this to mean that he didn't like black people and merely tolerated them as a means to his personal end.

That he never cared to remake himself was a mystery to many as cosmetic engineering in politics is always the first expression of a need to win or, more importantly, strengthen political power. When this was added to what came across as waves of animosity in how he treated black second-tier leadership in his party, significant numbers of those in the electorate and in his own party saw him as uncaring, and not having the 'common touch'. In those times, the label 'big-man party' appeared.

Ever since the early months of 2002, PNP supporters and some issue voters (surprisingly) would, if probed, admit that the JLP's leadership was giving some credence to what the little man at street level, especially PNP supporters, were saying: the JLP is a brown-man party.

This was intensified in the months leading up to the September 2007 elections. The sociological path from the JLP being described by some as a 'big-man party' in the 1980s to significant numbers seeing it as a 'brown-man party' from 2002 to now is a complex one and, some may argue, not worth discussing.

Some believe that if a factor in our politics has no seal of approval from those considered intellectual, then it is a waste of time to bring the discussion to the level of a newspaper column. And then there is the very valid view that skin colour ought not to be, in a utopian, colour-blind world, a factor in any consideration. Well, the factor exists and to me, that is all that matters.

Others may form the view that we have too much on our plate now to be discussing such a matter. After all, they may say, did Jamaica not elect Norman Manley, an upper-class, near-brown man in pre-colonial times? Did we not also elect PJ Patterson and eventually made him the 'winningest' politician in Jamaica's history? And, at the end of his run, which lasted from 1993 to 2006, for all that the 'black prince' PJ Patterson was worth in his governmental performance, Jamaica stood fourth from the last in GNP per capita of 25 countries in the region.

The perception that is supported by a majority among the electorate is that this Government has performed way below expectations, and because of this the 'brown-man' party label has resurfaced. When I asked a shop owner who is borderline JLP why he believes that the JLP is a brown-man party when it is going out of its way to ensure that Dudus, a black man, has all of his rights represented in dealing with the extradition request from the US, he quipped, "The first part is true, the second part is political expediency. Yuh trying to trap mi, but I dare yuh to tell mi a lying."

Where is the example of black success?

There is no doubt in my mind that how we view skin colour in this country comes from our direct look (overseas travel, TV, cable, Internet) at who runs the planet. There are not five countries in the world that have black populations that black people could point to and say, "There, we can do it and more." The other supporting influence is our own culture which sends a less-than-subtle message that brown-skinned or white Jamaicans behave better than black Jamaicans and, from the richest to the poorest, the colour fades respectively from white, brown, near-brown then black.

All of that coupled with the hangovers in the system from colonial times cause black Jamaicans to give more respect to lighter-skinned Jamaicans than those as black as us. It is more than likely that politicians such as the late Alexander Bustamante, Michael Manley and the still living Eddie Seaga perfectly understood that important factor and factored it into the times of their ascendancy.

Late last year Dr Oscar Lofters, a highly intelligent Jamaican living in Canada, wrote the following as feedback to a column on race by colleague columnist Michael Burke: "In Jamaica we have been conditioned to believe that white personifies power and progress. How can we not believe that white men who enslaved black people for centuries are not superior? All the great powers of the world for the last several centuries were white. We see white people land on the moon and win great wars.

"Then we see black people and black countries starving and begging for handouts. We see black people fleeing from poverty to the white meccas of New York and Miami. Everything our children see on white-inspired television reinforces white superiority. For God's sake, even the Jesus we worship in our churches is white. Our children see a black music icon change himself to a snow-white freak and we wonder why our children now bleach themselves. Then we tell our children that black people were once great. We dig up Egyptian history and great tales of African superiority and our children wonder where are the great current black countries and mighty black people. Then they see a Jamaica political and business class of brown and white citizens who appear in the social pages of our newspapers in fine raiment holding dainty champagne glasses, while most black citizens survive on a patty and a soft drink daily and live in squalid garrisons ."

Stark and true, but the fact remains that the most successful politician in Jamaica has been PJ Patterson, a black man, and it is my belief that that is why certain elements within the JLP have been covertly examining more than the possibilities of changing the 'face' that the JLP shows to the electorate.

The fact that the 'brown-man' leadership in the JLP has not signalled that it has the tools to deliver is giving this push more validity. As those in the forefront ponder the possibilities, the first big step lies in the recognition that the majority of the black entrepreneurial class (likely funders), which threatened to break big time into the rarefied air of 'top of the class', was destroyed at a time when there was a black prime minister, PJ Patterson, and a black finance minister, Omar Davies.

Well, so much for the dream.

Would you partake in mob killing?

It happened at the beginning of last week and it has shaken me up so much that I am rethinking my views on vigilante justice.

A young school girl, not yet 12, from a district in the Red Hills area, goes missing last Monday. All involved go in search of her. Among those desperately trying to find her is a taxi driver who plies the route between Chancery Street and Padmore. He accompanies relatives to the police station to report the child missing.

That same evening, in a mix of the worst of horror movies and miracles, a tragedy unfolds. That same taxi driver turns out to be a beast of the worst sort. Earlier he had picked up the girl from Half-Way-Tree, driven the long way up into the bushes by Smokey Vale, stopped the car, manhandled the child then brutally raped and did other unspeakable things to her.

After he was finished, he bashed her head in, dug a grave and buried her, thinking she was dead. While he was pretending to look for her, the girl, who survived, dug her way out of the shallow grave and ran naked onto the nearby roadway where she was rescued by a passerby.

At the hospital the early hope is that she will be able to retain sight in the eye on the side of her head the monster bashed in. She told them what happened and later the police arrested the man.

I have never been a supporter of mob violence, but even the father of the monster said, "If mi si dem a kill him, mi wi tun wey mi head."

Jamaican businessman Doug Halsall, CEO of Advanced Integrated Systems, wrote recently that it was his hope one day that in Jamaica, "...crime will soon be tamed to be more that of passion, rather than those born of anger, depravity and deviance".

What makes this crime so depraved and the wider Jamaican community so scared is that the taxi driver involved was 'just another man' trying to earn a bread by working like the rest of us. The question is, if his mind could conjure up such a sick, depraved idea and he could bring it to reality, what does that say about the rest of us who are ready to make the claim that we are normal and not prone to such extreme and deviant behaviour?

Were it my daughter involved, that police station could not hold such a monster.


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COMMENTS (22)

Merelle Clark
3/29/2010
"The vast majority of our people are black-skinned and over the years they have elected leaders who look nothing like them"
Mark, you are not alone in this train of thought. Myself and other I know have found this quite disturbing for years. In fact as you know, Jamaica and south Africa were the only two black majority countries that were ruled over by a minority group for years. Even though Jamaica was not seen as having an apartheid system the same practices were there in a subtle sort of way. However South Africa has moved forward while Jamaica has sadly regressed.
Is there any hope for our people? How do you change this mentality?
And by the way my family always say that Busta was the biggest ginnal in the world. He gave away Jamaica's bauxite for nothing because he didn't know the value of it. Seems it doesn't take much to be a 'national hero' in JA, no wonder all these other groups coming there to settle spare no time seeking high office and measures to control the power structure.
anguish of being
3/29/2010
TG, history done judge, Eddie was a dismal failure. "Jamaica: No Free Market, No Miracle" by James Bovard. No doubt you will probably dismiss Bovard a comrade and "biased" against Eddie. Such is the result f of cultist thinking, so sad...

anguish of being
3/29/2010
TG you poor little simpleton, I already schooled you on the topic of growth and development being two different things. The 60s saw growth, but unemployment, crime and the gap grew also. The 80s were similar, no development (no jingling of money for the masses, sorry. That Eddie inherited a shattered economy is without question, but tell me where did all the 80s cold war aid money - that is documented as one of the highest - go? And the FDI in 90s where not the same as in 80s, gone were the days of FDI in manufacturing to shore up anti-commie Eddie. Gone were days of Eddie using commie bogyman to keep capital in Jamaica. LOL PNP do nuff foolishness, yes, but the 90s being a postmodern wasteland where most of the manufacturing type FDI went to Asia is due to the cruel fate of history, not fault of any individual whether in PNP or JLP. You are an uneducated simpleton.
anguish of being
3/28/2010
Howie, wake up. Obama invests in wars, e.g. the increase in military budget, and is at this very moment trying to sell the Afghan imperial war that everyone, including Stevie Wonder, can clearly see they can't win. Change you can believe in! LOL!
Wharf Dawg
3/28/2010
Where theres is not justice anarchy rules. Mob rule flourishes in the absence of justice.
Now tell me this.. in light of the just released numbers (400,000) of cases on the dock some of them for years.. can you say that mob justice is not better than no justice?

Noel Richards
3/28/2010
Howie J,
To nip this issue in the bud I will now assume that you did not and have no intention of calling me racist, that you are very passionate about Obama's Presidency, and that we were speaking past one another. However, it is a mistake to assume that I am misinformed. I spent a few years in Washington, DC and I know how the US Federal system works. My brother is also a professional photojournalist who was a member of the White House Press Corps when Bill Clinton was President. Understand too that there are a few people from Boulder who are in important positions in Obama's Administration.
When I stated that the health care bill predated Obama there was no insult intended to Obama's involvement. Nancy Pelosi has been in the US Congress since 1987 and is the primary driving force behind the health care bill that Obama signed. Ted Kennedy championed the cause of health care reform for decades before his death. Obama is a breath of fresh air, but he cannot let the instinct for self preservation pull him down the path of compromise that is not in the overall best interest of the US. My particular problems with the health care reform package has to do with paying for it, eliminating the approximately US$80 Billion of Medicare fraud in the system, properly regulating the insurance companies without sending costs through the roof, allowing US citizens to purchase drugs at reduced cost from Canada (that would eliminate the need to institute the destructive practice of price controls) and hidden taxes.
My comment that Americans will straight jacket Obama in November is based on the fact that the American electorate does not historically approve of any single party controlling the Executive Branch and the Legislative Branch at the same time for extended periods. Many also disapprove of the way President Obama bailed out the banks, for reasons I cannot fit into this post.
I studied Political Science and Public Relations at the University of Miami in the 80's, with a minor in Marketing, but my greatest education has been my experiences with people. I do not know why I chose Political Science at the time, but I am happy I did. My understanding of Public Relations also makes the practices of the Jamaican political parties a revolting experience. To them PR means lying. I am as comfortable around white people as I am around black people. The fact is that even though I do not look like most Jamaicans I am most comfortable around fellow Jamaicans and I want to return to the land of my birth permanently, while traveling when I choose. The issues warping and preventing Jamaica from realizing its true potential can be removed with the offering of a new way. That new way excludes the "sweet mouth" career politician asking you to trust him or her to use your name and your money to make good for you. That new way sees a better political partner bringing tangible resources such as private Foreign Direct Investment and capital with no quid pro quo, to the table prior to engaging Jamaicans for their trust. I call them political partners because I see politicians as citizens who should want for others the basics they seek for themselves. I do not see politicians as servants if they are to lead. The caveat is to ensure you have a leader and not a political opportunist. A system that would work best for Jamaica is the Non Partisan System (no political parties in Government), operating within a Direct Democracy. The irony is that getting there will require a political party that will be willing to commit political suicide. This will require the permission of the people through referendums, which is a major component of Direct Democracies.
I post comments on Mark's articles because I find them very informative and refreshing. I believe he knows the pulse of the people and should be continually encouraged to speak out about his insights. Posting on the Observer keeps me engaged in the issues of Jamaica from thousands of miles away. I intend to be a part of the solution to many of those issues when the time is right.
T G
3/28/2010
_/_/_/_/
anguish of being
3/28/2010
Everybody knew the little growth in later part of the 80s from the CBI (cold war gift from Reagan) could not be duplicated in the "globalized economy" of the 90s where Asia was the favorite target for FDI. We can't even compete with NAFTA much less Asia.
_/_/_/_/
A discredited pile of Comrade Talking points.
Mr. Seaga and his crew inherited a destroyed economy.
He had 8 years. That 8 years was the only time between 1972 and 2007 that the economy of Jamaica registered any significant growth.
All the time wages and emoluments to public and private sector workers were being increased, yearly.
The numbers also suggested that Jamaica was one of the top beneficiaries of Foreign Direct Investments well into the late 90s with little or nothing but crime, violence and toasted infrastructure to show for it.
Worse than all of that in Spanish Town and its environs alone hundreds, not one, not two factories that were opened in the 8 years of Eddie Blinds leadership were shuttered under the Comrade Governments.
These are the facts. Dispute them!
....TG....
howie J
3/28/2010
Well said Chuck.
howie J
3/28/2010
“Some believe that if a factor in our politics has no seal of approval from those considered intellectual, then it is a waste of time to bring the discussion to the level of a newspaper column.”
Mark, your column is just as good as the authority you chose to defend your claim. You chose your audience by the source you chose to defend your claim. If the majority of the people who read Jamaica Observer are street vendors, whom you rely on to defend your claims, then your credibility as an honest columnist will be questioned.
We want to hear what you have to say about social issues, but while you are in a position to collect the raw information you also need the support of the experts to study and interpret the complexity of the issues surrounding your observations. Too often emotion is substituted for science in Jamaica. Anybody who reads your column knows by now that most of your conclusions are based on emotions and one kind of truth assessment, empirical truth. However, not all truth can be assessed empirically, infact, only the most basic truth can be assessed empirically. The truth of most real life issues facing Jamaica can only be assessed by a combination of different truth testings by specialists, the scientific community.

anguish of being
3/28/2010
The only reason PNP won for 18 years is due to the fact they have more die hard supporters then the JLP. And also, JLP suffered from lack of credibility on Eddie's part who could not convince Jamaicans that he could really make their pockets "jingle" this time around. Everybody knew the little growth in later part of the 80s from the CBI (cold war gift from Reagan) could not be duplicated in the "globalized economy" of the 90s where Asia was the favorite target for FDI. We can't even compete with NAFTA much less Asia.
Chuck Emanuel
3/28/2010
More obfuscation Mark ?.
Sorry for your disappointment with those who you gave your un-solicited and unwavering support.
As I have told you in the past, and will continue to maintain, is that those who lead, or seeks to lead our people must be measured by the guiding principles of integrity, morality and the rule of law.
peace !
howie J
3/28/2010
Noel wrote, “A very good example of the mindset to avoid is that of Howie J in the Editorial section (Health-care reform has rescued Obama presidency), who assumed I am racist because of my disagreement with both the timing and overall content of the health care reform bill just passed by Congress and signed by Obama.”
Well Noel, not only have you taken my response out of context, but you are also accusing me of calling you a racist, which is simple not true. You have said nothing to make me believe that you are a racist. It is for this reason why I post credible sources against which you can check the facts. If you were racist, I doubt you would have any concern for the people of Jamaica. I just think that like many Americans you are misinformed, especially since you didn’t prove any of your claims.
This is what you wrote, “…he [Obama] appears to be seeking a legacy more than anything else.” And this is my response,
“…these words would not be used by Noel if Obama was white, but because Obama is black he is trying to say that he has evil intentions. Yet he cannot draw on any facts to back up his pathetic calm. It is all in his heads. Thank God the majority of well thinking Americans knows better.”
What legacy are you talking about and how does your comment ties in with the Health Care debate? Could it be possible that Obama, in the true nature of all liberal Americans, genuinely care for the poor?
……………………………………………………………………
My next comment was” It has become clear to all level headed, clear thinking Americans that what has been going on now, since this president has been in office, is down right racist and even reading NOELS AND INVESTOR COMMENTS ONE CAN SEE THAT THEIR ARGUMENTS ARE INFLUENCED BY THE RACE OF OBAMA.”
The above statement is a summary of all your unsupported claims. I didn’t say that you are a racist; I say you are INFLUENCED by all the craziness around you. I made this statement based on other responses you have made in this forum and I haven’t seen anything so far to believe that you are racist.
.......................................
While I am at it, let me just add a final comment, to one of your most recent comments,” Americans see themselves as being unable to afford another George Bush.”
THERE ARE CLEAR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN OBAMA AND BUSH. ONE INVESTS IN WARS AND PERSONAL VENDETTAS, WHILE THE OTHER IN THE AMERICAN PEOPLE. ….

Noel Richards
3/28/2010
It's an unfortunate predicament that Connie Campbell finds herself in through no fault of her own. It will obviously be better if the legal issues go away and the debt is totally or mostly written off.
The color of the skin of the leaders does not matter, what matters is the content of their character. Martin Luther King Jr. did not make this a reality with his speech, but he highlighted a truth. Avoiding the worship of any human being, for any reason, will allow us to hold them all equally accountable in the eyes of the law, and in politics, for the content of their actual accomplishments that serve the interests of their constituents and not just themselves. A very good example of the mindset to avoid is that of Howie J in the Editorial section (Health-care reform has rescued Obama presidency), who assumed I am racist because of my disagreement with both the timing and overall content of the health care reform bill just passed by Congress and signed by Obama. He needs to realize that my disagreement does not mean that I do not want President Obama's administration to succeed, overall. He needs to know that the town in which I reside, Boulder, Colorado, which is north of Denver, is called "The People's Republic of Boulder" because it is so liberal. That it overwhelmingly voted for Mr. Obama and I was one of those who voted for him, while encouraging others to do the same. The bad leadership the US has been suffering from for too long now has placed extremely strong, but not impossible, expectations on President Obama. This means that he is being held to a higher standard because most Americans see themselves as being unable to afford another George Bush. Anyone blindly supporting Obama because of race needs to take a good look at the content of their character.
When you ask the question "Where is the example of black success?", I fully understand the context, however I prefer to ask "Where is the success?". I know that the story of success is there waiting to be written in Jamaica. Usain Bolt's usage of certain spikes on the track did not make him talented, he was already there, but just needed to bring it out. What I am trying to say is that Jamaicans as a whole have all the potential to be successful, for their own benefit as well as Jamaica's, when unencumbered by the destructive forces that are current day politics and politicians. It can happen.
Would you partake in mob killing? I wouldn't. I understand the desire to do so, that in every one of us there is the ability to do ghastly things to other human beings. In the case you highlighted there is just cause in my mind to take the perpetrator to the torture chamber and have him suffer for his crimes. There is even much more to be said for the relatives of the victims wanting this to be done. However, that would be catering to the same depraved tendencies of humans that saw this man do what was claimed. When we organize as a society we form a pact with one another, seeking to treat each other equally in the eyes of the law. We make promises that we must keep in order to maintain peace and harmony and avoid anarchy. Jamaica has always been close to anarchy in my opinion, primarily because Jamaica's legal system does not, in reality, treat all Jamaicans equally. I will still advise against vigilantism because Jamaica can be made right. As humans we still have an intellect that can prevail over instinct. By the way, I saw a mob beating in Jamaica when I was a teenager.
There used to be a ram goat at a bar in the Morant Bay area that would get really rambunctious if not given a Red Stripe and Craven A by a certain time each day. He would proceed to buck the bar until he was satisfied. This was back in the 70's. This was real, I saw it myself on trips to the beach in St. Thomas.

Tony Slim
3/28/2010
Mark do a poll. Ask Jamaicans how many of them read and understand the constitution. Ask them how a bill become law . Ask BASIC BASIC Civics questions. You will be surprise!
Then ask Jamaicans how many Dub plate XYZ sound system have. They can quote every song. Ask them about Obeah Man, Gully vs Gaza, Gun, Sex, Dutty wine, how to rob, how to kill, how to block road and be unruly and they will give you chapter and verse.
Some Jamaicans are a bunch of Stiffneck, Unruly, Arrogant, Disrespectful, Inconsiderate, Lackadaisical, Unprofessional, people. Look at the behaviour of the head nurse who represent the Nurses. Look at the behaviour of the Police and Government ministers. You can write until your computer "blowup" Jamica will never change until the system is PURGE!! SICK AND TIRED OF THE MADNESS!!! REVOLUTION TIME!!! Major Saunder , JDF...... IT'S TIME!!

T G
3/28/2010
How stupid here we are going to steer the conversation into another war on race/shade/skin-tone?
Out Of Many One People!
We must rise together or fall apart!
....TG....
Paul Lewis
3/28/2010
My donation is on its way. It is the perception of the people,he is refering to. I did not read where Dr. Lofters said that was his opinion. Didn't we have Hugh Shaerer as P.M.,so we have had one " black " P.M..Skin color has nothing to do with the performance of a Jamaican politician, the level of commitment does. Jamaica is hopelessly divided along party / subtle racial and social lines. Here we have the paradox of a " white " P.M.( Seaga ), doing more than most to preserve and uplift the Jamaican music and culture. He has been blamed for the creation of one of the most segregated communties in Jamaica. This is not distinctly Jamaican, every politician in the world does this, its called looking out for your supporters. While I agree that the images that we are fed have warped our psyche.The utimate responsibility rests with our upbringing, a child who is not taught how valuable and unique he/she is, will not have any selfworth, give what is seen in books ,television ,etc. Positive reinforcement in our education is needed, to provide a counter against the negative. Once again a very thought provoking column.
Tony Slim
3/28/2010
Black,Brown, White is not the problem. The great equalizer is education. The majority may be black,however how many of the majority is educated?
The physical chain is removed but the mental slavery exist. The black majority continue to elect the same "idiots" over and over and expect something different. The black majority Kill each other and defend turf , while they still live in poverty! Some Jamaicans need a BACKHAND PIMP SLAP!
That is why a serious "coup" is needed to flush out the system, stop the madness and restore law and order. Major Saunders again I say it's up to you. Round up the Troops! Come with Massive overwhelming force!

3/28/2010
The JLP needs to stay the course and make the tough decisions. Cut the public service now! Remember Christ was crucified by the 'spectators', many of whom are still around looking for miracles. Mr Golding when you are finished let them put back 'Barabas', in power. Our current situation has nothing to do with the present administration. My only concern with this government is the failure to be decisive. Cut and chop in the interest of future generations. Establish regulations to restrict the pirates. Remember also that there are pirates among your ranks. Get rid of them!!.Success should not be judged solely by the winning of elections.
Beresford Davidson
3/28/2010
"Does the JLP need Black Leadership?" this outlook is a weakness and at best it is divisive and undermine the higher levels of thinking in and about Jamaica and Jamaicans approach of how we see ourselves. Nobody in this world determine how their natural appearance in life. We can however perform excellently regardless, just like Miss Connie Campbell did before here temporary voice problem. A man of wisdom must never entertain popular foolishness.
Jay Brown
3/28/2010
I have always maintained the reasoning that murder is not something that I could commit very easily.
In a case like this however I am not sure much would be left of this SOB.
Taxi drivers are some of the worst predators on the road, no wonder they are killed so often.
george watson
3/28/2010
Would you participate in mob killing? yes Mark I would under these circumstances. The story reinforces what I have been preching on here. Some of those crying "wolf, wolf" the loudest are really wolves in sheeps' clothing, trying to divert attention from themselves. That is why our murder rate is so high. They give these fancy speeches at service clubs, but under the cover of darkness they pay others to do their dirty deed. They will be found out eventually, because God is watching.
And if they had a conscience they would suffer the consequences of having to live with themselves. Unfortunately so few of them have. They continue to live among us, sworn to protect us, but are literally killing us.
"Time longer than rope," my grandmother used to say.
george watson
3/28/2010
Mark, you cannot be so smart that it takes a little shopkeeper to tell you the obvious; the fact that Dudus is not being extradited has nothing to do with him, but everything to do with saving the prime minister's political skin. Extradite Dudus and the p.m. cannot even return to his own constituency.
In the meantime you are so anxious to put down black readership that you continue to perpetuate the lie that P.J. Patterson and Omar Davis took Jamaica to this level. It was all of them and all of us. Jamaica did not become Independent when the PNP came to power. And since 1962 both parties have been in and out of power, with Jamaicans expressing disatisfaction with both, hence the change of administrations. In the meantime If you want to see how well the JLP has done since assuming leadership read this and weep. I heard it on the electronic media but have not seen it in any of our daily papers. http://www.radiojamaica.com/content/view/26051/88/
You might also want to read Father Gregory's column in today's Observer.

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