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We need a good dose of 'Fortis'

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  • We need a good dose of 'Fortis'

    We need a good dose of 'Fortis'


    Monday, July 25, 2011

    Up to the time of writing this column, we have heard from the citizens, the church, the media, and the NDM, about the horrible slaying of three residents in a community with the picturesque name of Lauriston. But we haven't heard a single word from either major political party. Well, heck, some wicked people must have ganged up and stolen their microphones! We scanned the media reports to see if any politicians turned up at the Holy Trinity Cathedral for the funeral of Khajeel Mais: not a one.

    Are some politicians carefully hoarding their thugs for those unsavoury campaign practices that have so sullied our country's good name abroad? Such is the practice of desperadoes, people who value power and money over life and a healthy fear of God. I could not believe that women in politics especially, did not utter words of condemnation of the gang violence that massacred a bright young woman about to start at UWI and mutilated her God-fearing mother.

    In both political parties there are good men and women who rightly believe that you cannot change the system if you are not a part of it. But that requires the courage to remain objective and to call unrighteousness by its right name. When a nation becomes so depraved that its women's lives are so horrendously ended, we suffer on many levels. Not only are we mourning the death of our Jamaican sisters, we are also dealing with psychological and spiritual injury, one keenly felt by those closest to Charmaine Rattray and her 19-year-old daughter Joyette Lynch.

    The Observer reported, "Residents listened and cowered helplessly as the women's horrified screams pierced the morning's silence." Those screams will echo in the troubled minds of those who heard. This column has referred to the phenomenon of "collective grief" in which a community or a country mourn a tragic event.

    Last year, there were articles in the American press about collective grief over the shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords. The outcry against the assassination attempt on Giffords was similar to the outpouring of grief over the death of young Khajeel Mais, the Kingston College sixth-former who, it is alleged, was shot dead by an angry motorist after the taxi which was taking Khajeel to a fete bumped into a vehicle in the quiet suburb of Havendale.

    We are grateful that the media helped us through the seven stages of grief with their interviews of Khajeel's family members, coverage of the funeral and the legal actions being brought against the alleged offender. These stages are: shock, denial, anger, bargaining, depression, testing and acceptance.

    Unfortunately, our collective grief may not get the same therapy from the shocking slaughter of the two women of Lauriston. Their relatives and friends may very well be too fearful to express their grief, denying themselves and the wider Jamaican community the opportunity to participate in the painful but cathartic process. This is why we should value the school spirit of Kingston College Old Boys who kept the Khajeel Mais story live and vivid on the social media, even as the authorities played a bit of hide-and-seek over making an arrest. Jamaica needs a good dose of "Fortis" if we are to face up to this monster that obviously has a lien on the free expression of politicians.

    If solutions to issues of law and order, health, education and the environment seem obvious to the average Joe yet beyond the reach of the leaders, it could be that they are wading in a bog of political expediency with a very strong undertow. PM Golding gave us a clue to this conundrum when he went on national television to apologise for his handling of the Manatt-Dudus issue. Joan Gordon-Webley gave us cause to hope, when she referred to some powerful offenders who were fined for their careless management of their solid waste.

    In the Opposition, we have Dr Peter Phillips who soldiers on, batter-bruised as he is for having spoken out against the threat of gang-influenced politics and the failings of his party leader, and Ronnie Thwaites who has kept his credibility with focused arguments within and useful commentary without Gordon House.

    However, the JLP and PNP had better know that the country is disenchanted with them both. The PNP may be looking good in the polls, but the movers and shakers who can make or break the party are not over-enthused with its combative approach. This is a time in the history of Jamaica when political parties have a real opportunity to re-invent themselves and win over the hearts of Jamaicans.

    The first step is to identify the issues which are affecting the widest cross-section of Jamaicans and show daily, hourly that you are working diligently and creatively to solve them.

    Feedback on the ground is that Jamaica is ripe for a third party and Mr Golding may be ruing the day when he left the NDM to return to the JLP.

    The NDM has spoken up where the JLP and PNP have been silent. In a release on Thursday night the NDM called for a State of Emergency in St Catherine:
    "The NDM has expressed outrage and believes that the murderous gangs in the Spanish Town area and its environs needs to be crushed and it may take the necessary measures of a State of Emergency to effect the clean-up of the Klansman and One Order gangs.

    "We are confident that with the Honourable Delroy Chuck in place as Justice Minister, the rights of citizens will not be unduly infringed."
    No buses, no flags, no vaunted briefing - just a straight-talking communiqué demanding that we protect our citizens. The Jamaican people are ready to embrace that voluble new child, born of democracy and a red-hot social media. Free speech may finally free us.

    Please read my poem, For our Sisters We Rise at http://www.poetry-lowrie-chin.blogspot.com.

    lowriechin@aim.com


    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/colum...#ixzz1T7guVWXB
    Last edited by Karl; July 25, 2011, 10:11 AM.

  • #2
    Jean Lowrie - if I was Khajeel Mais' parents, I would not want any of those darn politicians turning up to sully his funeral services. I would INSIST that they be barred from entering the Church.

    ..Who knows, perhaps the family took that decision.
    Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
    - Langston Hughes

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    • #3
      Certainly our politics and our politicians bred the current Jamaica that has reached the level where even the comtemplation of such barbarity could find fertile ground.

      Yup! The politicians of both parties are guilty.

      ...but hope srings eternal. The fact that man has the ability to grow and change I am not of the thought that old politicians cannot wake up and smell the coffee, change in outlook and behaviour...hope lives. Looking for, at the very least, some of these politicians to step up. Needed that stepping up -NOW!
      "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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      • #4
        so bruce can change and you would vote for bruce ..... if that change was to the pnp...

        Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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        • #5
          but mi think a di dancehall music?
          • 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.

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          • #6
            It's the dancehall mentality, and the music is just one element, a major element in fact, that goes into inculcating that mentality.

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            • #7
              LOL!!! Dancehall mentality!!!! A guess if we get rid of the dancehall mentalilty there would be no crime in Ja. Get rid of it then.
              • 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


              • #8
                Karl I don't have to tell you about the effects of what happens man has descended to the level of a wild beast. We seem to under estimate Shakespeare's Macbeth. We can recite it word for word but we are lost on it's true meaning. That classic is really a blue print for good governance and what to avoid in order to have a society with majority civil behavior. It holds true for centuries because one can now compare Ja's society to the works within that classic.

                We seem to pride ourselves as intellectuals in Ja, but the true power of an intellectual is to reform or change an institution. Ja is unable to reform the institution of slavery on the island. Please do not bull me about class (as this also has its roots in racism and slavery). The greatest attempt was made in 1972 and it has been reversed due to political blunders (geopolitics et al) hence we now see the effects. Illiteracy was first and foremost in in 1972 yet thirty nine years later Ja is still battling illitercay (it only means nothing has changed). Our education system needs serious reform as it's based on the slavery system of old.How can you tell a twelve year old they are no good because they cannot pass or score high on tests based on memory? Yes memory because the math and science cannot be applied anywhere in real world problems. I could go on but time doesn't permit. Let me close by saying the X6 killing showed up Ja big time. It proves my point that Ja is still living three hundred years in the past. Clothes and means of transportation may chnge but principles are the same. anyone (of Euro descent) from the 17th and 18th century would be at home in present day ja.

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                • #9
                  There you go again!.

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                  • #10
                    ....intellectuals Jawge?. We might have more PhDs, but not more intellectuals than 30 years ago. Everybody in Jamaica; and their grandmothers have Dr. in front of their names. Even Kartel was visiting professor.

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                    • #11
                      "However, the JLP and PNP had better know that the country is disenchanted with them both"

                      Is there any truth to the statement?

                      Should we continue favor one wossa over the other wossa?

                      What is your thoughts on Nation Building?

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                      • #12
                        Best for the families that they never showed up, sully it would be.

                        OK PNP & JLP mouth pieces, what have you to say?

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Jawge View Post
                          . It proves my point that Ja is still living three hundred years in the past. Clothes and means of transportation may chnge but principles are the same. anyone (of Euro descent) from the 17th and 18th century would be at home in present day ja.
                          Nonsense Jawge. You can make your point without ridiculous exaggerations. A lot is wrong with JA society but to suggest that nothing has changed in 300 years is a bit over the top don't you think? Didn't an arrest eventually take place? Lets see where it goes from here.

                          What is clear to me is that things will happen when public outcry lasts for more than a weekend of rum talk and verandah gossip. It does not happen nearly often enough.
                          "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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                          • #14
                            Bruce is despicable, regardless of what party clothes he may be wearing.


                            BLACK LIVES MATTER

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                            • #15
                              Who??...My thought on nation building?

                              Cho...if other country have crime and voilence...den nutten nuh wrang if Jumaika have it tu.

                              Want me to add some links to this post to prove dat crime an violence gwane in other countries?
                              The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

                              HL

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