Skip to main content

March 17, 2016 Source

Dear Editor,

Powerful countries have often demanded that other countries behave towards them in accordance with the dictum ‘Do as I say, not as I do’. Within recent times the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) appears to have adopted that dictum with an adaptation of the language to read: ‘Do as I say now, not as I did then’. The following four citations are illustrative.

  1. PPP General Secretary and former Minister of Home Affairs Clement Rohee has called on Minister Khemraj Ramjattan to resign. However, after the National Assembly passed a motion of no confidence in Mr Rohee as Minister of Home Affairs, neither he nor the then government took action to comply with the motion.
  2. Member of Parliament Gail Teixeira recently implored the government to treat fairly those heads of mission appointed by the PPP/C administration whose contracts were not renewed, presumably to avoid the treatment meted out by Dr Cheddi Jagan’s government to Cedric Grant, Ronald Austin and others.
  3. Former President Donald Ramotar has called for the release (rightly so) of the forensic audits. But what did he do with the NCN (fraud?) report? Was it even released? Was it ever acted upon?
  4. There is incessant chatter about witch-hunting and victimisation. Do the chatterers remember Clarence Chue, whose reinstatement to office was ordered by the courts but ignored by the Cheddi Jagan government as was the court decision to hold a by-election in Houston three decades before Chue’s ordeal. And there were others beside Chue.

I am told that sometime in the past when people misbehaved, they were required or advised, as appropriate, to “take a bath with blue” (or bathe in blue-water). This option is available for use by any political stakeholder. As for the PPP, if the idea of a bath in blue is not appealing, that party may wish to consider establishing a truce with the politics of division and confrontation and adopt the politics of cooperation. Such a truce can develop a life of its own and be habit forming. It may also induce other political stakeholders to follow suit. Courage and a new vision are required. This would be a fitting gift from the oldest political party to the Guyanese people on the 50th anniversary of independence.

Yours faithfully,

Rashleigh E Jackson

Replies sorted oldest to newest

This government had an opportunity to stand above petty politics but they are hell bent in engaging in confrontational politics. Tell the many East Indians who lost their daily bread that Cheddi Jagan did the same in the pass so you must now experience hunger, tell the family of Walter Rodney that he committed suicide and that the dogs of war were actually award winning heroes. This East Indian here or in the words of these dogs of war "just a koolie " will never fall for that.

 

Prashad
Last edited by Prashad
Django posted:

March 17, 2016 Source

Dear Editor,

Powerful countries have often demanded that other countries behave towards them in accordance with the dictum ‘Do as I say, not as I do’. Within recent times the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) appears to have adopted that dictum with an adaptation of the language to read: ‘Do as I say now, not as I did then’. The following four citations are illustrative.

  1. PPP General Secretary and former Minister of Home Affairs Clement Rohee has called on Minister Khemraj Ramjattan to resign. However, after the National Assembly passed a motion of no confidence in Mr Rohee as Minister of Home Affairs, neither he nor the then government took action to comply with the motion.
  2. Member of Parliament Gail Teixeira recently implored the government to treat fairly those heads of mission appointed by the PPP/C administration whose contracts were not renewed, presumably to avoid the treatment meted out by Dr Cheddi Jagan’s government to Cedric Grant, Ronald Austin and others.
  3. Former President Donald Ramotar has called for the release (rightly so) of the forensic audits. But what did he do with the NCN (fraud?) report? Was it even released? Was it ever acted upon?
  4. There is incessant chatter about witch-hunting and victimisation. Do the chatterers remember Clarence Chue, whose reinstatement to office was ordered by the courts but ignored by the Cheddi Jagan government as was the court decision to hold a by-election in Houston three decades before Chue’s ordeal. And there were others beside Chue.

I am told that sometime in the past when people misbehaved, they were required or advised, as appropriate, to “take a bath with blue” (or bathe in blue-water). This option is available for use by any political stakeholder. As for the PPP, if the idea of a bath in blue is not appealing, that party may wish to consider establishing a truce with the politics of division and confrontation and adopt the politics of cooperation. Such a truce can develop a life of its own and be habit forming. It may also induce other political stakeholders to follow suit. Courage and a new vision are required. This would be a fitting gift from the oldest political party to the Guyanese people on the 50th anniversary of independence.

Yours faithfully,

Rashleigh E Jackson

Rashleigh: PNC to the bone.

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Django posted:
skeldon_man posted:
Django posted:

Yours faithfully,

Rashleigh E Jackson

Rashleigh: PNC to the bone.

You remembered was Foreign Affairs Minister, some of his relatives are from my village.

Don't care what kind of minister he was. He is a PNC thug. He should have been Sanitation Minister.

FM
skeldon_man posted:
Django posted:

March 17, 2016 Source

Dear Editor,

Powerful countries have often demanded that other countries behave towards them in accordance with the dictum ‘Do as I say, not as I do’. Within recent times the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) appears to have adopted that dictum with an adaptation of the language to read: ‘Do as I say now, not as I did then’. The following four citations are illustrative.

  1. PPP General Secretary and former Minister of Home Affairs Clement Rohee has called on Minister Khemraj Ramjattan to resign. However, after the National Assembly passed a motion of no confidence in Mr Rohee as Minister of Home Affairs, neither he nor the then government took action to comply with the motion.
  2. Member of Parliament Gail Teixeira recently implored the government to treat fairly those heads of mission appointed by the PPP/C administration whose contracts were not renewed, presumably to avoid the treatment meted out by Dr Cheddi Jagan’s government to Cedric Grant, Ronald Austin and others.
  3. Former President Donald Ramotar has called for the release (rightly so) of the forensic audits. But what did he do with the NCN (fraud?) report? Was it even released? Was it ever acted upon?
  4. There is incessant chatter about witch-hunting and victimisation. Do the chatterers remember Clarence Chue, whose reinstatement to office was ordered by the courts but ignored by the Cheddi Jagan government as was the court decision to hold a by-election in Houston three decades before Chue’s ordeal. And there were others beside Chue.

I am told that sometime in the past when people misbehaved, they were required or advised, as appropriate, to “take a bath with blue” (or bathe in blue-water). This option is available for use by any political stakeholder. As for the PPP, if the idea of a bath in blue is not appealing, that party may wish to consider establishing a truce with the politics of division and confrontation and adopt the politics of cooperation. Such a truce can develop a life of its own and be habit forming. It may also induce other political stakeholders to follow suit. Courage and a new vision are required. This would be a fitting gift from the oldest political party to the Guyanese people on the 50th anniversary of independence.

Yours faithfully,

Rashleigh E Jackson

Rashleigh: PNC to the bone.

PNC to the Bone indeed.  And related to Dominic Gaskin, Granger son-in-law, aka Gaskin/Jackson Jewelers on Camp Street. 

Bibi Haniffa
Bibi Haniffa posted:
skeldon_man posted:
Django posted:

Rashleigh E Jackson

Rashleigh: PNC to the bone.

PNC to the Bone indeed.  And related to Dominic Gaskin, Granger son-in-law, aka Gaskin/Jackson Jewelers on Camp Street. 

Suh what sayin Bibi Dominic get some training from the old head Rashleigh.

Django
Bibi Haniffa posted:

Bai Django, with that crowd you never know.  And Rashleigh nephew Dean Michael Jackson is the Consul General for Switzerland in Guyana!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Well i guess we will have to judge by their performance,talking about Switzerland i was there a few years ago,my sister lives at the border of France and Switzerland.

Django
baseman posted:
Django posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

Bai Django, with that crowd you never know.  And Rashleigh nephew Dean Michael Jackson is the Consul General for Switzerland in Guyana!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Well i guess we will have to judge by their performance,talking about Switzerland i was there a few years ago,my sister lives at the border of France and Switzerland.

Which town?  I met very few Guyanese while there!

I went to Basel,my sister lives in St Louis France.

Django
Last edited by Django
baseman posted:
Django posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

So you sister is Base neighbor - our German-speaking PPP stalwart on this site!!!!  Does she live in Basel?

I went to Basel, she lives in France.

I will be there in Sept, come over let's have a lil Guyana session!!

I plan to go in June,want to visit Paris, Swiss alps and Germany

baseman posted:
Django posted:
baseman posted:
Django posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

Bai Django, with that crowd you never know.  And Rashleigh nephew Dean Michael Jackson is the Consul General for Switzerland in Guyana!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Well i guess we will have to judge by their performance,talking about Switzerland i was there a few years ago,my sister lives at the border of France and Switzerland.

Which town?  I met very few Guyanese while there!

I went to Basel,my sister lives in St Louis France.

ok, France!!  Passed there a few times, right across the border!

Correct.

Django
Last edited by Django
Bibi Haniffa posted:

I am going to be there later this year too.  We should all coordinate and have a real Guyana session - a la France.  I speak French and Base speaks German so we got that covered!!

Would like to our timing is out,maybe next time.

Django
Last edited by Django
baseman posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

I am going to be there later this year too.  We should all coordinate and have a real Guyana session - a la France.  I speak French and Base speaks German so we got that covered!!

You going there, when?  I will be there for a few weeks!

Madrid, Switzerland, and Germany in August.

Bibi Haniffa
baseman posted:
Django posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

I am going to be there later this year too.  We should all coordinate and have a real Guyana session - a la France.  I speak French and Base speaks German so we got that covered!!

Would like to our timing is out,maybe next time.

We should link up once and go wine tasting in the Alsace!!  And bring Bibi, knowing French does help!!

Not a bad idea,i will relate a little story my brother-in-law[Swiss] went to Guyana twice on his last trip[about 10 years ago]they arrested him at the airport after looking a his medication[narcotic] my sister all worried called me,i said gaal go to the French Consulate,next day she went they bring my brother-in-law immediately apologized and even offered compensation[did not take].

He [retired]was an accountant with "COP''cool guy the incident never bothered him,he laugh it off.

Django
baseman posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:

What contributed more to the politics of division than the rigging of elections by the PNC to keep itself in power and the shameless domination of the Afro-Guyanese????

And brutalizing, subjugating, driving out and taking away the assets of Indians and handing to the PNC constituency!!

We led the independence movement in the Caribbean and ended up being losers under the PNC. Whatever prestige Guyana had before independence was destroyed during the Burnham years.  Rasleigh was part and parcel of that regime which governed undemocratically and wrecked the economy to basket case.

Billy Ram Balgobin
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:
baseman posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:

What contributed more to the politics of division than the rigging of elections by the PNC to keep itself in power and the shameless domination of the Afro-Guyanese????

And brutalizing, subjugating, driving out and taking away the assets of Indians and handing to the PNC constituency!!

We led the independence movement in the Caribbean and ended up being losers under the PNC. Whatever prestige Guyana had before independence was destroyed during the Burnham years.  Rasleigh was part and parcel of that regime which governed undemocratically and wrecked the economy to basket case.

No doubt there Billy,Kabaka dead a long time ago,let start from Hoyte time and move on.

Django
Django posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:
baseman posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:

What contributed more to the politics of division than the rigging of elections by the PNC to keep itself in power and the shameless domination of the Afro-Guyanese????

And brutalizing, subjugating, driving out and taking away the assets of Indians and handing to the PNC constituency!!

We led the independence movement in the Caribbean and ended up being losers under the PNC. Whatever prestige Guyana had before independence was destroyed during the Burnham years.  Rasleigh was part and parcel of that regime which governed undemocratically and wrecked the economy to basket case.

No doubt there Billy,Kabaka dead a long time ago,let start from Hoyte time and move on.

Mo fiah! Slow Fiah!

Was he trying to build unity?????

Billy Ram Balgobin
baseman posted:
Django posted:
baseman posted:
Django posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

I am going to be there later this year too.  We should all coordinate and have a real Guyana session - a la France.  I speak French and Base speaks German so we got that covered!!

Would like to our timing is out,maybe next time.

We should link up once and go wine tasting in the Alsace!!  And bring Bibi, knowing French does help!!

Not a bad idea,i will relate a little story my brother-in-law[Swiss] went to Guyana twice on his last trip[about 10 years ago]they arrested him at the airport after looking a his medication[narcotic] my sister all worried called me,i said gaal go to the French Consulate,next day she went they bring my brother-in-law immediately apologized and even offered compensation[did not take].

He [retired]was an accountant with "COP''cool guy the incident never bothered him,he laugh it off.

Well, you see, Guyana ain't too bad as people say.  In the US, he rass would have done landed on the terror no-fly list!!

He loved the Guyana no complain,now this guh jam you,tha chap raised my neices and nephews[mixed] married my sister after her divorce.

Nah bhai in US the people more smarter they know that type of medication.

Django
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:
Django posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted

We led the independence movement in the Caribbean and ended up being losers under the PNC. Whatever prestige Guyana had before independence was destroyed during the Burnham years.  Rasleigh was part and parcel of that regime which governed undemocratically and wrecked the economy to basket case.

No doubt there Billy,Kabaka dead a long time ago,let start from Hoyte time and move on.

Mo fiah! Slow Fiah!

Was he trying to build unity?????

Oii Billy if we continue harping on the past and don't instigate the living politicians to mend fences,Guyana will not progress.

Django
Last edited by Django
baseman posted:
Django posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:
Django posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted

We led the independence movement in the Caribbean and ended up being losers under the PNC. Whatever prestige Guyana had before independence was destroyed during the Burnham years.  Rasleigh was part and parcel of that regime which governed undemocratically and wrecked the economy to basket case.

No doubt there Billy,Kabaka dead a long time ago,let start from Hoyte time and move on.

Mo fiah! Slow Fiah!

Was he trying to build unity?????

Oii Billy if we continue harping on the past and don't instigate the living politicians to mend fences,Guyana will not progress.

The sins of the past are revisiting Guyana as we speak!

And remember, those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it!!

Base,seriously if the Coalition Government don't perform to uplift the Guyanese people [they lost my moral support] i prefer to see periodic changes in government for Guyana.

Django
Prashad posted:

You guys are going to stand out like Burnham in his purple suit. A handful of browns in an ocean of white in ice cold Switzerland.

 

I saw a few brown and black people there Prash.

Django
Django posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:
baseman posted:
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:

What contributed more to the politics of division than the rigging of elections by the PNC to keep itself in power and the shameless domination of the Afro-Guyanese????

And brutalizing, subjugating, driving out and taking away the assets of Indians and handing to the PNC constituency!!

We led the independence movement in the Caribbean and ended up being losers under the PNC. Whatever prestige Guyana had before independence was destroyed during the Burnham years.  Rasleigh was part and parcel of that regime which governed undemocratically and wrecked the economy to basket case.

No doubt there Billy,Kabaka dead a long time ago,let start from Hoyte time and move on.

Kabaka is not dead.  Look at how many people in the current government have their roots to the Kabaka and is carrying out his wishes.  The Grangers, Burnhams, Jacksons, Gaskins, and others are one big royal family.  Their children marry each other and they know their mission!!

Bibi Haniffa
Django posted:
baseman posted:
Django posted:
baseman posted:
Django posted:
Bibi Haniffa posted:

I am going to be there later this year too.  We should all coordinate and have a real Guyana session - a la France.  I speak French and Base speaks German so we got that covered!!

Would like to our timing is out,maybe next time.

We should link up once and go wine tasting in the Alsace!!  And bring Bibi, knowing French does help!!

Not a bad idea,i will relate a little story my brother-in-law[Swiss] went to Guyana twice on his last trip[about 10 years ago]they arrested him at the airport after looking a his medication[narcotic] my sister all worried called me,i said gaal go to the French Consulate,next day she went they bring my brother-in-law immediately apologized and even offered compensation[did not take].

He [retired]was an accountant with "COP''cool guy the incident never bothered him,he laugh it off.

Well, you see, Guyana ain't too bad as people say.  In the US, he rass would have done landed on the terror no-fly list!!

He loved the Guyana no complain,now this guh jam you,tha chap raised my neices and nephews[mixed] married my sister after her divorce.

Nah bhai in US the people more smarter they know that type of medication.

Your sister made a good choice to live in France.  It is a good country for mixed race and blended families.  I am sure she is happier there than living in Guyana where she would have been hung on a cross.  Good for her, she has to live her life.

Bibi Haniffa
Bibi Haniffa posted:
Django posted:
baseman posted:
Django posted:
baseman posted

 

Well, you see, Guyana ain't too bad as people say.  In the US, he rass would have done landed on the terror no-fly list!!

He loved the Guyana no complain,now this guh jam you,tha chap raised my neices and nephews[mixed] married my sister after her divorce.

Nah bhai in US the people more smarter they know that type of medication.

Your sister made a good choice to live in France.  It is a good country for mixed race and blended families.  I am sure she is happier there than living in Guyana where she would have been hung on a cross.  Good for her, she has to live her life.

Bibi my sister is a happy camper she lived there over 30 yrs,her grands are so mixed up German,French,Swiss[white],Indian,African they are sixth generation in our family counting from my Great grandparents from India.

Django
Prashad posted:

This government had an opportunity to stand above petty politics but they are hell bent in engaging in confrontational politics.

 

The PPP engaged in the politics of divisiveness in what they did to PNC appointees after 1992.  They further engaged in divisiveness when they forced black senior civil servants to retire, upon attaining 55, and refused to appoint others, in both instances hurting their pensions.

So why does the PPP suddenly have so much mouth now that THEY claim that they are suffering what THEY did to Afro Guyanese over their 23 years of ethnically based TYRANNY!

FM
Billy Ram Balgobin posted:
 

We led the independence movement in the Caribbean

 

Jamaica had universal adult sufferage in 1944.  Eric Williams was very active long before either Cheddi or Burnham. Trinidad was also active before any one knew about the existence of the PPP.

And many of the people who were initially involved with the PPP were chased out when it became the brown bai KKK.

The PNC has as much claim to be involved in that as does the PPP!  Do you know that the women's group which Janet was involved with, was active BEFORE she arrived in Guyana?  And what of stalwarts like Critchlow?  No credit?

Listen go haul your brown bai KKK crap!

FM

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×