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  • The big lie, the best prime minister, 'let them eat cake'..

    The big lie, the best prime minister, 'let them eat cake' yam, cassava
    Franklin Johnston
    Friday, January 09, 2009


    This year will be a good one for Jamaica. Our people should resolve to work hard, stop killing, help the poor, and if unemployed "work for food" or as an apprentice with some farm or business and get know-how until the economy turns. Praise God, dance regularly and do what you enjoy; life is short, but do not idle or waste time.

    Our capacity to deceive ourselves is limitless. I sometimes wonder if some writers and analysts lived in Jamaica before the American sub-prime crisis. The big lie is that something happened to Jamaica last year, different from the bind we have been in for many years. The world had over 20 years of wild growth, yet we have been credit-crunched for decades.

    To start, I have a credit crunch quiz; seven questions. Name one Jamaican institution which is exposed to American sub-prime debt? Iceland is suffering now, but made money in the boom years. Its people grew rich; GDP per capita is US$50,000 and they bought some top UK firms.They have lost billions, but nothing can move the schools, airports, hotels, opera houses, infrastructure and the know-how they accumulated. What success did we enjoy in the global boom years? How many Trinidad firms did we buy? What dizzy heights did workers' wages, GDP and FDI reach? Did we have easy access to loans, food or housing? Did we have jobs, a big trade surplus and pay our national debt easily?

    Which of our institutions relaxed their credit terms and brought our young, poor and unemployed people into home ownership? It never happened here. Poor Americans bought houses, fridges, cars, stoves with no money down, interest-free for months, and in the UK people got 120 per cent mortgages. People overseas made millions and "small fry" like Joe the plumber "licked their fingers". Our crisis is long-standing. We suffered when our partners were booming and we will suffer more now they are suffering. Our consumers and small businesses were never given the credit to live well or succeed in their ventures.

    We need a Ministry of Food to focus minds. More anon. For now, just know that food is a key tool of politics - the best case study is Zimbabwe. Whoever controls food, controls people, and so instead of industry adjudication, an import permit is in the politicians' gift. This tactic is designed to control farm bodies, brings large farmers to conform by the threat of bankrupting them using imports and for cronies to start up business. In the boom years, the NDFJ chaired by R Danny Williams, was a unique, successful, non-government bank which gave small people loans for businesses and farming and held their hands in a crisis. But even they could not get enough money to lend.

    Let's continue with a credit crunch exercise! Make a list of what was going very well in Jamaica before the global credit crunch. good! Now, make a second list of what was going badly. Check your list, here is mine! Crime, violence, gambling, imports, debt and financial services were growth areas. We had many tourists, but Air Jamaica made no profit. Was health care good? Which Christmas did we not import chicken chassis?
    Marie Antioinette is much maligned. Her "Let them eat brioche" is misunderstood. In France then, sweet bread (sugar bun) was easy, same price as bread, but for the rich only. For us, it is easier to grow rice, corn and beef than to change the eating habits of three million citizens. We farmed them once and we can do so again. My hope is that Dr Tufton will revert to his solid pre-election instincts and act on them.

    Cabinet may think that, like salmon, they can swim upstream and ignore people's wishes, but they do so to their peril. The cassava edict is high-handed. If the poor desired more cassava (the rich always eat what they like), they would not need to be told to eat more. As a cassava farmer, I lost my shirt. Parish officers marvelled at our varieties and yields, but sales under 30 tons did not dent our volumes or pay the bank and so we put on the ripper and ploughed the crop under.

    The last straw was a visit by head office experts who advised us to make bammy. Imagine this: at reaping time, in debt, no factory; with rats despoiling our crop in the fields. advice most cruel and stupid. Jamaican appetites are for rice and peas, chicken, flour, pork, cornmeal and meat; other crops are "relish". In Africa, yam and cassava are basics, not in Jamaica. Past Cabinets tried to "ram" breadfuit flour, yam rice, cassava dough down our throats; and we used our purchasing power to say "no". Yet, they still try. We want rice and chicken, curry goat on Friday with hard food on the side and on Saturday beef soup. We are a free people, not children. We need no diet sheet from Cabinet - they should take it home first and see what the wife and kids think; respect our choices and promote the crops we want. If the minister acts, we can grow a third of our needs in three years.

    Brains are best, but there is no brain without a body and a nation moves forward on its belly! Cassava and yam are culture, just like mento is culture; respect to mento, but we drudge reggae and dancehall and eat rice, flour and meat 90 per cent of the time.

    So, what is the big truth? The challenges we face now are the same ones which existed at Independence. No change. Prime Ministers - the Manleys, Bustamante, Seaga, Sangster, Patterson and Simpson Miller all failed. We had the orator, the white, the finance genius, the beloved of the masses and black like me; none of them m ade us sustainable in food, education, jobs, health care, peace, or housing; not even in one. We are still at ground zero - 1962.

    Michael Manley was best of the lot for three reasons: first we learnt to love ourselves and be ourselves; black, bastard, white, poor, rich, maid, doctor; second, that we could speak up, demand more and better, not take just what was doled out; third, he served the poor and died poor. PM Golding can top him by delivering the goods; but there is a cost. President Johnson signed into law the civil rights of black Americans, knowing that the South would not vote for his party for decades to come. He did the right thing for country, at great cost to his party. Our PM should match this. He should explain to the nation why we must focus resources on food, basic and primary education and then act. He has two good ministers in the portfolios, and these areas lay the foundation for all our other needs to be met. Tacius would approve and Jamaica would ever call him blessed.

    Dr Franklin Johnston is an international project manager with Teape-Johnston, currently on assignment in the UK.
    franklinjohnston@hotmail.com
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    "Michael Manley was best of the lot for three reasons: first we learnt to love ourselves and be ourselves; black, bastard, white, poor, rich, maid, doctor; second, that we could speak up, demand more and better, not take just what was doled out; third, he served the poor and died poor."

    LOL !! WHOEEE !!

    Wi still trying to recover from the Genius of Michael Manley.. I have to give him props in that he seems to have hosts of mindless sycophants still praising his name even in the face of the stark reality that his BUNGLING has generations still suffering even after his death..

    The 1-2 punch of Manley and Patterson will probably never be equalled in the anals of Jamaican post-independence history.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Karl View Post
      Michael Manley was best of the lot for three reasons: first we learnt to love ourselves and be ourselves; black, bastard, white, poor, rich, maid, doctor
      The writer of this article, Franklin Johnston, actually had my interest all the way until the final paragraph. This is actually a very good article, and it is a pity that he allowed his political view to cloud the accuracy of his previous statements.

      How can one write, with a straight face, that in the Manley era of the 1970s "we learnt to love ourselves"? What I recall from that best forgotten era was the elevation of poverty as the new ideal, and an increased suspicion and downright hatred for successful, middle class fellow Jamaicans! Suddenly, business people, both big and small, became the new enemy while unpleasant expressions like "Sufferer," etc. quickly began appearing on buildings, on public transportation, etc.

      We learnt to love ourselves? Interesting.

      The following quotation (below) is what I've been trying to tell Assasin. Jamaica is by no means a "normal" society, not even by Caribbean standards! Our failures as a country, despite the presence of immense natural and human resources, defies logical explanation, in my view!

      Our capacity to deceive ourselves is limitless. I sometimes wonder if some writers and analysts lived in Jamaica before the American sub-prime crisis. The big lie is that something happened to Jamaica last year, different from the bind we have been in for many years. The world had over 20 years of wild growth, yet we have been credit-crunched for decades.

      To start, I have a credit crunch quiz; seven questions. Name one Jamaican institution which is exposed to American sub-prime debt? Iceland is suffering now, but made money in the boom years. Its people grew rich; GDP per capita is US$50,000 and they bought some top UK firms.They have lost billions, but nothing can move the schools, airports, hotels, opera houses, infrastructure and the know-how they accumulated. What success did we enjoy in the global boom years? How many Trinidad firms did we buy? What dizzy heights did workers' wages, GDP and FDI reach? Did we have easy access to loans, food or housing? Did we have jobs, a big trade surplus and pay our national debt easily?

      Which of our institutions relaxed their credit terms and brought our young, poor and unemployed people into home ownership? It never happened here. Poor Americans bought houses, fridges, cars, stoves with no money down, interest-free for months, and in the UK people got 120 per cent mortgages. People overseas made millions and "small fry" like Joe the plumber "licked their fingers". Our crisis is long-standing. We suffered when our partners were booming and we will suffer more now they are suffering. Our consumers and small businesses were never given the credit to live well or succeed in their ventures.

      Comment


      • #4
        Regardless of political view, it cannot be denied that the decade of the 70's saw the MAJORITY of Jamaicans rise in socio-political consciousness and being proud to be Jamaican. Never before were people willing to 'respect' and 'hail the man' on the street from whatever walk of life.
        The social barriers of colour, class, race and great divide were threatened and the reality was the status quo was threatened - whether perceived or real. I lived in Jamaica during that time and I neither saw, felt or practiced any of the "..downright hatred for successful, middle class fellow Jamaicans".
        Call it what you want but it was a renaissance of Jamaicanism without which many of us wouldn't be where we are now. That era was quickly followed by the "get rich at all cost" -a return to materialism, another misguided politicla paradigm that economic prosperity would save us. Both have failed and we are now plunged into self-inflicted social, political and economic anarchy - funded, aided and abetted by the drug Barons, the Dons and the nouveau-riche.
        We must be careful of historians who would care to rewrite our past.

        Comment


        • #5
          mi hear you. The only difference with mi is i don't think we are unique. When i hear from my friends of different countries how resources are wasted it makes me wonder. however if we are unique or not we certainly did a good job of wasting it(mi nauh debate that with you).
          • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Historian View Post
            The writer of this article, Franklin Johnston, actually had my interest all the way until the final paragraph. This is actually a very good article, and it is a pity that he allowed his political view to cloud the accuracy of his previous statements.

            How can one write, with a straight face, that in the Manley era of the 1970s "we learnt to love ourselves"? What I recall from that best forgotten era was the elevation of poverty as the new ideal, and an increased suspicion and downright hatred for successful, middle class fellow Jamaicans! Suddenly, business people, both big and small, became the new enemy while unpleasant expressions like "Sufferer," etc. quickly began appearing on buildings, on public transportation, etc.

            We learnt to love ourselves? Interesting.
            Historian: You are a good man...but it would seem that Morris Cargill and others of his elk addled your mind...or you may have been 'locked up' by your parents?

            The media can at times shout lies so loud that many believe!!! Too often during those Manley years the media and those who felt threatened by the rise of the so called 'common folk' shouted lies that in some minds the lies became real!

            The Manley years lead to a cataclysmic change from the vast majority being confined to little hope of advancement in their lot to a galvanising of that vast majority towards being whatever was desired. That self-belief lives on today! There is no turning back from the empower of the people that Manley brought.
            "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Karl
              The Manley years lead to a cataclysmic change from the vast majority being confined to little hope of advancement in their lot to a galvanising of that vast majority towards being whatever was desired. That self-belief lives on today! There is no turning back from the empower of the people that Manley brought.
              Yes, that belief lives today, as the Passa Passa sessions, Sting, Weddy Weddy Wednesdays and other popular expressions of cultural development show! Just type in the key words on YouTube and you’ll see the truth of my statement here! This self-empowerment that you refer to is also clearly reflected in the long lines at the USA and Canadian embassies.

              Karl, please stop fooling yourself about the legacy of the 1970s!!! Based on what I see around the Jamaican social environment, there is not a great deal to boast about!


              Originally posted by Karl View Post
              Historian: You are a good man...but it would seem that Morris Cargill and others of his elk addled your mind...or you may have been 'locked up' by your parents?

              The media can at times shout lies so loud that many believe!!! Too often during those Manley years the media and those who felt threatened by the rise of the so called 'common folk' shouted lies that in some minds the lies became real!

              Karl, you are a good man too, and someone I respect very much! In fact, you were one of the first persons to make me feel welcome when I first began posting both here (as well as on Willi’s track and field forum) over five years ago.

              I am also aware of the work of journalists like Morris Cargill and John Hearne, two excellent writers. Likewise, I am certainly more aware of the various aspects and idiosyncrasies of the mass media than most people posting or reading this forum. Please believe this!

              We need to realize, though, that the mass media, the so-called “Fourth Estate,” is often congratulated or maligned by media consumers based on whether the media are disseminating information that reflects our viewpoints and our biases. Is this the case with your criticism of media messages during the Manley years?

              Comment


              • #8
                Who is the best?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Yuh gwan like Risto.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Historian View Post
                    Yes, that belief lives today, as the Passa Passa sessions, Sting, Weddy Weddy Wednesdays and other popular expressions of cultural development show! Just type in the key words on YouTube and you’ll see the truth of my statement here! This self-empowerment that you refer to is also clearly reflected in the long lines at the USA and Canadian embassies.

                    Karl, please stop fooling yourself about the legacy of the 1970s!!! Based on what I see around the Jamaican social environment, there is not a great deal to boast about!
                    It is fact that the underlying strength to grasp the opportunities of which Michael Manley spoke was within us. ...but it took Michael Manley to challenge the status quo and create the desire of that then 'now' to challenge the way things were.

                    If I had not gotten to know you through and via your postings over the years I would think you are in need of some of Michael's exhortations to throw off the 'blinders'. Why must (I use "must" advisedly) you use only the examples you mentioned? What of the many who have started businesses like...

                    Gray's Pepper Products Ltd.
                    Chantilly Road
                    P.O Box 81
                    Savanna-la-mar
                    Westmoreland
                    Jamaica

                    ...started in the '70s?

                    Why mention the lines at various embassies without the pointing to many who used the opportunities for upward mobility? Is it in your mind 'badwud' and or 'terrible' to leave our country with its high unemployment and high underemployment...a country without the resources to provide the number of opportunities to all that would satisfy the ambitions awakened by Michael?

                    There is no Caribbean country that provides the numbers of opportunities to satisfy all its citizens...have all its citizens receive the type standard of living we in Jamaica wish for our citizens. Is it a crime for those whose ambitions are not being satisfied at home to leave for areas of the world where more opportiunities exist that would fullfill those ambitions?

                    Michael did not think so. Neither do the vast majority of Jamaicans. Yet, it must be understood and indeed taken note of, that Michael brought to bear his physical effort, his intellect, passion and his powers of persuasion to encourage all to work together for increasing opportunities and the seeking of opportunites that when grasped would lift us upwards out of the circumstance in which we (our parents parents...and our parents) found ourselves after the many years of slavery and the disheartening years thereafter.

                    I think it would be good to 'look' back at the Jamaican society immediately after slavery, then 'look' at the years after 1944 but before 1962, then 1962 through to when Michael came to office for the first time? 'Look' at those as three distinct periods. Well look at the strides families have made since Michael?

                    Yes...I hear you! There is the still huge unemployment and huge underemployment. ...but I think we would, unlike in the pre-Michael years, find it extremely difficult to finda family without some who have attended secondary high school...a tertiary education institution... There are so many in-charge of their own businesses...whose children and or relatives are in the medical profession, a teacher, an attorney, etc... So many to be found in top posts in various sectors of the economy... So many forging paths in countries across the globe... Yes, Michael lit a fire and it burns brightly in our souls.

                    I am convinced that there were the few who did everything in their powers...and they were aided and assisted by 'the house-slaves'...to have us "know your places"...keep us in the dark "who are you"...but there was and is, no stopping us. We have kicked over the traces...and the country has been in our collective hands sans Michael to do with as we shall (not will...but shall)!

                    We are now at a place where the crime and violence, the slow pace of economic development (development which perpetuates the high unemployment and high underemployment) is ours to slay! That means increasing economic opportunites at home...and at this time...today...increased migration to more rapidly expose us to opportunites for greater numbers...and reduce the internal pressures for jobs and other resources...to more quickly find that place where living standard is considered 'good' for all.





                    Karl, you are a good man too, and someone I respect very much! In fact, you were one of the first persons to make me feel welcome when I first began posting both here (as well as on Willi’s track and field forum) over five years ago.

                    I am also aware of the work of journalists like Morris Cargill and John Hearne, two excellent writers. Likewise, I am certainly more aware of the various aspects and idiosyncrasies of the mass media than most people posting or reading this forum. Please believe this!

                    We need to realize, though, that the mass media, the so-called “Fourth Estate,” is often congratulated or maligned by media consumers based on whether the media are disseminating information that reflects our viewpoints and our biases. Is this the case with your criticism of media messages during the Manley years?
                    We all have our biases. It depends on how we view 'things'! I think I am dispassionate... I call it as I see it!
                    Last edited by Karl; January 11, 2009, 09:59 PM.
                    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      nobody fail to realise that manley did some good but how do you explain the collapse of our economy under manley's rule, and don't tell me that was the media.
                      • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Assasin View Post
                        nobody fail to realise that manley did some good but how do you explain the collapse of our economy under manley's rule, and don't tell me that was the media.
                        Collapse of the economy?

                        The first response would be, what economy?

                        The second would be...
                        Well consider production levels and sudden increased demands on government funds to expand the services offered without corresponding increase in production...flight of capital/and persons...sabotage by internal and external forces in many and varied shapes...
                        Last edited by Karl; January 11, 2009, 10:01 PM.
                        "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          did you realise how many manufaturing plant closed during that time?

                          I guess the PNP admin and Manley had nothing to do with it. It was like Boxhill as it relates to Burrell?
                          • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Assasin View Post
                            did you realise how many manufaturing plant closed during that time?

                            I guess the PNP admin and Manley had nothing to do with it. It was like Boxhill as it relates to Burrell?
                            Snicker - maybe it was the "5 flights a day to Miami"
                            Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                            - Langston Hughes

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Assasin View Post
                              did you realise how many manufaturing plant closed during that time?

                              I guess the PNP admin and Manley had nothing to do with it. It was like Boxhill as it relates to Burrell?
                              Manley years?

                              Do you realise how many new businesses came on stream?

                              The closures came as an avalanche after Manley...and that is fact!!
                              "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                              Comment

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