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  • As Obi-Wan Kenobe would say: I sense a

    (positive) disturbance in the force.

    Just llok at today's Gleaner column and letter and see a trend building. Is like the pot is positively bubbling over with
    POSITIVE and CONSTUCTIVE ideas and suggestions. Nice. Maybe things are developing as they should and there is indeed cause for hope.

    Some examples:

    Impose passport restrictions
    I think Jamaica's government should stop issuing our passports to habitual criminals. I know we have educated criminals and some first-time criminals who travel, but the prime minister should do something about those misfits who go overseas and cause us so much embarrassment. Jamaica now seems to need a dictator, and I am all for it. The [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]Bahamas[/COLOR][/COLOR] used to have a passport law aimed at keeping their known criminals at [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]home[/COLOR][/COLOR]

    . Jamaica should adopt the same.
    Jo Brow

    and

    LETTER OF THE DAY - Value of outside criticism
    The Editor, Sir: I suspect that one of the main reasons Jamaica has so many problems today is that for decades it has exported a significant number of its most talented people. Like a country which has sent its best young men off to war...

  • #2
    Here is another one:

    Fight with systems, not people

    Published: Thursday | December 3, 2009


    Andrew Issacs, Contributor

    Having lived on Jamaica for all my life, I have watched the gradual decline in our abilities to implement programmes, solve simple problems and remain focused on specific issues. In recent years, two of the issues that have taken centre stage are corruption in the police force and the impact of garrisons. To these problems, loud and often misguided calls have been made to rid the force of corrupt police personnel and to dismantle the garrisons.

    Ridding the force of corrupt cops, I am assuming, means to identify and expel those who are corrupt. However, is this practical or is it another baseless hope that we have allowed ourselves to hang on to? I submit that no individual or group within or outside the force, will be able to go through the JCF and identify the corrupt officers. Acts of corruption will be reduced in the force or any other organisation, when the possibility of detection is extremely high. This, however, is only the first step, as having detected the act, sanctions must then be applied swiftly and without consideration for the status of the offender.

    Reward cops
    Simultaneously, proper policing must be rewarded. I would shudder at the possibility of having the opportunity to identify those officers who have been promoted or otherwise rewarded, who have had tainted or colourful histories. Corruption needs support and would otherwise die without the collusion of individuals and the systems of policing being employed.
    While I applaud the efforts by the police to set up sting operations, how many more will we need to mount? How many more members of the public will need to come forward and say that officer Joe wants money from me?

    Why not use technology in the form of dash cams etc. to record the activities of police? Apply sanctions whenever operations are conducted without cameras running. Why not ensure that there is always communication between central control and the officers before any engagement with criminal elements?

    I am not a policeman and know very little about policing; however, my position is that we fight corruption with systems not people. People will act in ways that belie proper behaviour outside of proper boundaries or rules. We will continue to graduate good officers who ultimately become tainted because our system of policing allows it to happen.

    A mindset
    Similarly, as we call on politicians to dismantle garrison communities, we need to first establish what garrisons really are in the Jamaican context. Are they places or do they represent a mindset. In today's Jamaica, I strongly believe they represent the latter. As such, I ask the question, how do you dismantle a mind? I hear the fallacious argument about the unfulfilled promise to dismantle garrisons. However, if the initial idea was invalid, why do we wish to have it perpetuated? Why do people choose to live in this way? Is it for economic, security or social reasons? If any of these three is true, then the change will only come when as a people we can find ways to help those in garrisons to find the alternative means of meeting these needs. Otherwise, let us forget about the talk of dismantling.

    Years ago, I was responsible for a hostel of young men. I was asked by my superiors why these fellows were so destructive and boisterous, and also instructed that I had to do something about it. In response, I asked that my superiors consider what alternative behaviour they expected when these men were required to be crossing rivulets of sewage on their way to the kitchen, or seeing the facility wiped and polished only when rented to outsiders.

    When this state changed, so too did the behaviour, as well as the forceful implementation of rules. If this story sounds familiar, then maybe it can be the starting point of a mind change for those in the so-called garrisons.

    Feedback may be sent to andrewisaacs@hotmail.com orletters@gleanerjm.com
    Last edited by Karl; December 4, 2009, 09:24 AM.

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    • #3
      Originally posted by Willi View Post
      (positive) disturbance in the force.


      LETTER OF THE DAY - Value of outside criticism
      The Editor, Sir: I suspect that one of the main reasons Jamaica has so many problems today is that for decades it has exported a significant number of its most talented people. Like a country which has sent its best young men off to war...
      ...and I guess the writer is saying those coming behind 'too dunce'? There may be some truth in that...hey? ...aren't we are where we are?!...

      ...but????
      "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

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