For the marijuana posse, something to think about! (Are we cursed with our seemingly non-ending series of utterly useless, no-backbone governments in Jamaica?)
The following paragraphs have been copied from Mark Wignall's "Wild Accusations and Olint," in today's Sunday Observer.
One reader saw us as fooling ourselves that we will ever solve our crime problems. She suggested that we market it.
"I worked in the tourism industry for over a decade and became aware that many people visit Jamaica to be able to smoke a 'spliff' on the beach with the wind in their hair and reggae music in their ears. It's a powerful combination. And in light of the fact that our morals have been pitched over the precipice, why can't we just embrace the fact that we are outlaws and begin to capitalise on the outlaw status? Why is Amsterdam not a pariah nation with their coffee shops and legal funhouses?
"If we legalise marijuana and allow the US to patrol our waters to ensure it doesn't get out, so many more tourists would come just to enjoy a week of lawlessness. I'm serious. No government is interested in curbing crime. None. So why not just sell who we are and stop the pretence."
"Every time I travel to the Pacific Rim, I marvel at the airport signs in Taipei, Jakarta and on my single trip into Singapore, how they proclaim drug trafficking to be punishable by death. And they are SERIOUS. We are just caressing the problem and it makes people laugh at us. We should just make some money off the damn thing. Sell it for local consumption and the government control the sales."
Minister MacMillan, the state of the JLP government's public relations is 'dead'. More and more of the public is buying less and less of the little that oozes out through the increasing miasma that has fallen over the administration.
And this becomes increasingly unfair to hard- working Cabinet members like Education Minister Andrew Holness who will be forced to carry much of the deadweight of the JLP when next it faces the polls.
In the face of dead public relations, Minister MacMillan, I will be looking from you much more of that great foil of 'dead' PR. Performance which can be seen, felt, embraced and celebrated.
The following paragraphs have been copied from Mark Wignall's "Wild Accusations and Olint," in today's Sunday Observer.
One reader saw us as fooling ourselves that we will ever solve our crime problems. She suggested that we market it.
"I worked in the tourism industry for over a decade and became aware that many people visit Jamaica to be able to smoke a 'spliff' on the beach with the wind in their hair and reggae music in their ears. It's a powerful combination. And in light of the fact that our morals have been pitched over the precipice, why can't we just embrace the fact that we are outlaws and begin to capitalise on the outlaw status? Why is Amsterdam not a pariah nation with their coffee shops and legal funhouses?
"If we legalise marijuana and allow the US to patrol our waters to ensure it doesn't get out, so many more tourists would come just to enjoy a week of lawlessness. I'm serious. No government is interested in curbing crime. None. So why not just sell who we are and stop the pretence."
"Every time I travel to the Pacific Rim, I marvel at the airport signs in Taipei, Jakarta and on my single trip into Singapore, how they proclaim drug trafficking to be punishable by death. And they are SERIOUS. We are just caressing the problem and it makes people laugh at us. We should just make some money off the damn thing. Sell it for local consumption and the government control the sales."
Minister MacMillan, the state of the JLP government's public relations is 'dead'. More and more of the public is buying less and less of the little that oozes out through the increasing miasma that has fallen over the administration.
And this becomes increasingly unfair to hard- working Cabinet members like Education Minister Andrew Holness who will be forced to carry much of the deadweight of the JLP when next it faces the polls.
In the face of dead public relations, Minister MacMillan, I will be looking from you much more of that great foil of 'dead' PR. Performance which can be seen, felt, embraced and celebrated.
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