A Look Into The Shadows
“What happened to these masses, to this people? For forty years it had been driven through the desert, with threats and promises, with imaginary terrors and imaginary rewards. But where was the Promised Land?”
A political blog about Bahamian politics in The Bahamas, Bahamian Politicans - and the entire Bahamas political lot. Bahamian Blogger Dennis Dames keeps you updated on the political news and views throughout the islands of The Bahamas without fear or favor. Bahamian Politicians and the Bahamian Political Arena: Updates one Post at a time on Bahamas Politics and Bahamas Politicans; and their local, regional and international policies and perspectives.
The Bahamas in numbers
The Nassau Guardian Editorial
Our census, a vital and complicated undertaking, describes the identity of The Bahamas through numbers. It is also indicative of trends and analysis of data based on successive census reports.
For The Bahamas this not only means comparison on a regional scale, but also between our islands. Remarkably, this is the 19th decennial census to be conducted in The Bahamas. Early census counts are not likely to be comparable to recent data due to likely discrepancies in survey methods, but they nonetheless provide value to the history of The Bahamas.
Interestingly, the census report makes note of the first census in 1722 whereby 74 percent of the population was white and 26 percent black, compared to the 2010 census whereby 91 percent identified themselves as black, five percent white, and two percent as of mixed race. Such an extreme reorientation of the racial makeup of a country identifies the need to reexamine assumptions about who we are.
Population statistics are perhaps the most widely recognized outcome of a census. For those living in New Providence, it is all too obvious that the island accounts for 246,329 people or 70 percent of the total Bahamian population. With an additional 35,497 people since 2000, it is all too apparent that the roads are more congested, lines a bit longer and the housing prices just a bit higher.
But herein lies the importance of data availability. While New Providence may have experienced the greatest increase in people, several other islands had a much higher percent change in population growth – take Abaco, which experienced an increase of 4,054 people or nearly 31 percent to a population of 17,224 compared to 2000. Though such an increase would be nominal for New Providence over 10 years, in Abaco the additional people stress local infrastructure from power generation to road maintenance.
The Bahamas’ greatest challenge is providing and maintaining basic infrastructure across the populated islands. Even with all the controversy, Abaco needed a new power generating facility and still suffers from countless power failures. While the population congregates in New Providence, growth and a retraction of growth on some islands must guide government expenditure and planning.
Likewise, the government must accept the diversity of residents living in The Bahamas and amend its immigration policies. Seventeen percent of the population claims citizenship elsewhere, the majority or 64 percent were from Haiti. Though the census claims to account for residents regardless of immigration status, it is difficult to imagine that the census was able to account for all residents of known Haitian communities such as those found in Abaco.
The Nassau Guardian has reported on specific data tables such as Internet access and usage, health insurance and access to toilets at private dwellings. There are numerous other tables where trends can be extrapolated on for use in education planning, the looming retirement of baby boomers and their future healthcare needs, marriage trends and reproduction rates.
A copy of the Census 2010 Report became publicly available online on Monday, October 15. Such data provides innumerable opportunities for government agencies, private researchers and the general public to better understand our Bahamas.
March 07, 2013
The dignity and equality of gays and lesbians
Front Porch
BY SIMON
Recall the hysteria and hate-drenched anti-gay demonstrations of the previous two decades protesting gay and lesbian visitors cruising to the country to experience our Bahamian hospitality.
Some of the gay-bashers invoked the narrative of the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah in Genesis 19. Genesis, like other books of the Hebrew Scriptures, consists of numerous literary genres and devices.
Genesis contains not one, but two, creation accounts, literary renderings crafted by ancient scribes to convey theological meaning. Today, literalists still believe these to be factual accounts, though the science of evolution demonstrates otherwise. Sodom and Gomorrah recalls an ancient Jewish prohibition against sodomy and homosexuality. Today, modern science offers compelling facts and hypotheses on the nature, complexity and range of human sexuality.
Still, literalists have the right to entertain fact-free opinions on the genesis of life and the genesis of homosexuality much as racists of old utilized Christian Scripture, pseudo-science and bigotry to justify slavery and white supremacy.
Eventually, the homophobes will be written into history as intellectual cave dwellers whose primitive world views were exorcised by the evolution of human ethical consciousness and moral progress.
Antediluvian
Those who marched fervently in support of segregation, even in living memory for Jim Crow in America and apartheid in South Africa, have seen the judgement of contemporaries and of history on their antediluvian theologies and philosophies.
Which brings us back to the anti-gay demonstrations at the City of Nassau, and to the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah.
While reflections on sodomy and homosexuality as referenced in Genesis 19 dominate the exegesis of the story in various quarters, there is another theological interpretation.
For various theologians and preachers, inhospitality is the great or greater moral failing at Sodom and Gomorrah. This insight seemed lost on the unwelcoming protestors who gathered downtown, targeting a select group of visitors in a demonstration of inhospitality, and incivility by some.
It is revealing that the clerical clique and their claque of crusaders were more moved to demonstrate against gays in port for a few hours, than they have been to protest the sometimes orgy of nubile and half-naked, stoned and drunk, fornicating and gambling, straight spring breakers in town for several weeks.
Apparently, certain favorite “sins” give some moralists goose bumps, titillating and inflaming their moral loins more than other sins. But back to our story. It is April 14, 1998. Here is LifeSiteNews.com’s read of the day’s events: “Besieged by gay cruise ships, Bahama residents held a protest Tuesday at the arrival of yet another gay ‘Love Boat’ on its shores. About 300 demonstrators from a group called Save the Bahamas crowded Prince George Wharf where the cruise ship SeaBreeze [sic] had docked with its 800 lesbian passengers.”
Nassau besieged? One might have imagined from this report, that the pleasant sounding SeaBreeze, populated mostly by lesbian passengers armed with sun tan lotion, greenbacks and piƱa coladas, was another battleship in a gay armada intent on laying siege to “Bahama residents”.
Exaggerated
Thankfully, the cruise did not prove even as threatening as the exaggerated story of Colonel Andrew Deveaux Jr.’s brief siege of Nassau in 1783. Still, there was a scuffle of sorts as reported by LifeSiteNews.com, revealing who was actually besieged and by whom: “When eight of the SeaBreeze passengers decided to brave the demonstration and headed toward the straw market, the crowd turned and headed toward them, yelling ‘Go back. Go back.’ Five of the women turned and headed back toward the ship; three charged ahead, and were followed for several blocks by a group of six protesters.”
Some years later, in 2004, following another gay cruise, and in response to Minister of Tourism Obie Wilchcombe, then President of the Bahamas Christian Council (BCC) Rev. Dr. William Thompson offered a sermonette from the Mount of Ridiculousness.
Wilchcombe was quoted in The Tribune: “We live in a democracy, everyone is entitled to their own opinion and expression thereof.” Reacting in a statement carried by this journal, the cleric attacked long-established democratic principles and the Constitution.
“Rev. Thompson said while The Bahamas is a democratic nation, ‘It is not true that everyone is entitled to express their opinion in any way they wish, this would result in anarchy...’”
Yes, there are limits to freedom of speech. Yet he continued: “‘A democracy, while safeguarding the concerns of the minority, is committed to carrying out the will of the majority of its citizens.’”
He got it partially right. But the part he got wrong, both on ethical and constitutional grounds, is appalling, the mindset of a theocrat, and not a democrat living in a pluralistic society.
Slavery was the will of the majority in the United States for centuries. This did not make it moral that the majority approved of the denial of rights to a minority.
The tyranny of the majority has led to the persecution of minorities throughout history, including Christians, as testified to by St. Paul and the early church. Religious freedom is dependent on the protection of minority rights, rights denied still in countries where Christians are being killed today.
If the world subscribed to Thompson’s views, the suppression of the views and expressions of religious freedom by Christian minorities would be acceptable in countries where there are non-Christian majorities.
Thompson, seemingly happily ignorant of the Constitution, thundered: “More importantly, we are not dealing with an opinion, we are instead dealing with a deviant lifestyle that is offensive to the majority of Bahamians.”
Whatever Thompson may think of the manner in which gays and lesbians live, they have as much right to voice their opinions, express their love, form associations and enjoy the freedoms that he enjoys. While many find his opinions and actions idiotic and offensive, he has a right to appear foolish and uninformed.
Ignorant
Notice Thompson’s cleverly ignorant conflation of “opinion” and “lifestyle”. What he seems to be saying to gays and lesbians is that their freedom of speech should be limited, that they should shut the hell up, because the majority doesn’t like their lifestyle.
Disturbingly, Thompson is now executive chairman of ZNS, overseeing a state broadcast media supposedly committed to a free exchange of viewpoints.
Bishop Sam Greene, another former BCC president, notoriously intimated that if the government sanctioned gay and lesbian marriages, he would follow the example of Guy Fawkes, who, in 1605, attempted to blow up Parliament.
While Thompson appeared unhappy with gays and lesbians expressing themselves, this writer does not recall his publicly rebuking Greene for comments that may have constituted an incitement to violence and anarchy.
Much of today’s rabidly anti-gay agenda is led by those whose world views are pre-modern and pre-Enlightenment, when gays and lesbians were persecuted and demonized, before the protection of minorities was codified in the rule of law and when the likes of Guy Fawkes were stoking verbal and literal fireworks.
The virulent anti-gay crusaders were historic throwbacks even when they were demonstrating their inhospitality to gay cruise ship passengers. Today, as gays and lesbians are increasingly seen first and foremost as fellow human beings, and not as objects of derision, the homophobes appear even more dated.
Gays and lesbians are neighbors and co-workers; politicians, police officers and pastors; volunteers and role models; heroes and heroines, friends and family; parents and life-partners, who are owed mutual respect and basic equality by right of their citizenship as children of God and as fellow Bahamians.
The considerable shift in global consciousness continues to move in the direction of upholding the value and dignity of human beings based on the content of one’s character, and not the happenstance of race, gender or sexual orientation.
• frontporchguardian@gmail.com , bahamapundit
February 28, 2013
Double talk
An up close look at duplicity and hypocrisy in nat’l politics
BY CANDIA DAMES
Guardian News Editor
candia@nasguard.com
The political landscape is forever changing and with it comes shifting political positions.
For some politicians, their views on issues of national import evolve due to certain developments that cast new light on these matters. In some circumstances, this is quite understandable.
But for others, their positions shift based on political expediency and opportunity.
These are the flip-floppers, the hypocrites, the duplicitous bunch who may be stunned perhaps if confronted with past statements lined up against current views.
Very rarely do their words come back to haunt them; not because the evidence of their duplicity is not there, but because it often remains buried on the dusty pages of newspapers that are clipped and stored away.
These politicians depend on the short memories of the electorate, perhaps, or the failure of media to do a better job at making them accountable for their utterances and actions.
The examples of double talk stretch back years, and really take little digging to be exposed, especially in the technological age.
In opposition, some politicians latch on to pet issues — crime, the environment, education and others. But in government, they sometimes lose whatever ‘passion’ they might have had for these issues.
To be clear, the flip-floppers are not unique to any one party or philosophical grouping. They are on every side. They use words to score points, assuage fears and grab headlines.
Often, they change positions based on what side of the political aisle they may be on at the time. In opposition, a politician’s view on a subject may differ entirely from the view he or she might express in government.
The archives of The Nassau Guardian reveal more than enough flip-flopping, duplicity and hypocrisy to write many weeks of articles.
Consider these few examples:
Dr. Bernard Nottage on the Coroner’s Court
In opposition, Dr. Nottage was a passionate advocate for crime victims and strong in his concerns about alleged police abuse.
He seemed to have little trust in the Corner’s Court or in the police to investigate themselves.
But as national security minister, his tone is different.
After two men died in police custody just over a week ago, Dr. Nottage cautioned the public against making assumptions until all the facts are known.
“I can’t rush to judgment,” he told reporters. “I hold the commissioner of police directly responsible for the conduct of his officers. He knows that, he reports to me regularly and my experience thus far has been where justifiable complaints have been made against police officers, the commissioner has been resolute in pursuing the matter to its lawful conviction.”
Further expressing confidence in the police and the coroner to do their job, Dr. Nottage said, “It is my view that even without the coroner’s involvement if the matter could be investigated by police that a thorough job would be done.
“But I don’t think that would satisfy the public and so that is why the coroner, who is an independent institution, is very important in this matter.”
In September 2012, after The Nassau Guardian reported on several fatal police shootings, Nottage said criminals cannot expect to brandish weapons at police without facing consequences.
In December 2010, he was not a minister. Back then he expressed little faith in the police and in the Coroner’s Court.
On December 1, 2010, he called for an independent public inquiry into the death of Shamarco Newbold, a 19-year-old who was killed by police.
“It is not good enough to refer it to the Coroner’s Court, Mr. Speaker,” Nottage said in the House of Assembly.
“Neither is it good enough for there to be an internal inquiry on the part of the police.”
These days, it is good enough as far as Nottage is concerned.
As an aside, Nottage has yet to use his position of power to push for ‘Marco’s Law’ or the establishment of a sex offenders’ register, things he called for while in opposition, after the murder of 11-year-old Marco Archer in September 2011.
“I believe that out of this sad event will come new policies and perhaps even new legislation... possibly a Marco's Law. I shall push for that," he vowed back then.
The legislation would seek to strengthen the penalties associated with child molestation, he said.
Perhaps Dr. Nottage will use his weight before the end of this term to push for the things he called for in opposition.
Darron Cash and BTC
Free National Movement (FNM) Chairman Darron Cash has more than one example of being a flip-flopper, but for the purpose of this piece, I will focus on just one.
After Prime Minister Perry Christie told reporters last week that the government is considering appointing a select committee to examine the controversial 2011 sale of 51 percent of the shares of the Bahamas Telecommunications Company (BTC) to Cable and Wireless Communications (CWC), Cash lashed out in a statement.
He said, “The suggestion that [Christie] wants a probe of the BTC sale to Cable and Wireless first evokes disbelief, then laughter and pity”.
Cash then urged the government to “bring it on”.
He said probing BTC would be a “meaningless journey” that would waste taxpayer dollars.
Cash also accused Christie of trying to deflect attention away from his “nine months of colossal failure and ineptitude”.
And he said the prime minister was attempting to tarnish the legacy of former Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham.
Stunning words from a man who was so critical of the BTC deal back in 2011 that he wrote a lengthy article on why the deal was a bad one.
In fact, Cash himself urged then Prime Minister Ingraham to “take the Cable and Wireless/LIME deal back to the drawing board and design a better deal”.
Cash wrote, “I disagree with the government’s proposed action. I believe it is wrong for the country, this decision to sell the country short.
“It is a betrayal of future generations, and like a bad stock on BISX — in which you have little confidence — the government is selling the next generation (my generation) short.”
In that piece, Cash seemed to have suggested that the deal would have reflected poorly on Ingraham’s legacy. His tone has changed.
How could Darron Cash expect anyone to take him seriously?
If it is the FNM’s position that Christie’s contemplation of a probe is laughable or evokes pity, Cash should have been the last person to say so.
His position on the BTC deal was clear at the time he stated it.
Defending himself yesterday, Cash said, “As to my personal position regarding the sale of BTC, let me make one thing abundantly clear to the chairman of the PLP; my position on the sale of BTC has absolutely nothing to do with whether the present government should waste public money on a meaningless inquiry into that sale.”
The mid-year budget statement
This week, the Christie administration will present its mid-year budget statement, revealing adjustments in spending and providing a progress report on the state of public finances and the economy.
The practice of presenting the statement was instituted by the Ingraham administration, and every year during the debate that followed, the PLP’s position was that it was a waste of time.
In a statement on February 23, 2011, the PLP said the mid-year budget was “a waste of time, a public relations sham like so much of what this government does by sleight of hand”.
It was the message of the PLP during each debate of the mid-year budget under Ingraham.
For example, during debate in the Senate on March 16, 2009, then Senator Allyson Maynard-Gibson repeated what her colleagues had to say in the House.
“The mid-year budget review is a waste of time, staff resources and money,” she opined. “The information in this mid-year budget could have been given in a one man press conference.”
A few days earlier, then Minister of State for Immigration Branville McCartney defended the Ingraham administration for bringing the mid-year budget.
“Our country should be forever grateful to our visionary prime minister, the Rt. Hon. Hubert A. Ingraham, for having the fore thought to introduce this concept of a mid-year budget report to Parliament,” McCartney said.
“…This exercise is critical towards our government’s effort to encourage and promote accountability, transparency, best financial practices and proper budget planning”.
This year, the mid-year budget statement will apparently not be a waste of time because the PLP is bringing it.
Such is politics I suppose.
Unemployment numbers
The Department of Statistics recently released new unemployment numbers that show the unemployment rate in The Bahamas decreased slightly from 14.7 percent to 14 percent.
The latest survey was conducted from October 29 to November 4, 2012. It showed that 165,255 were listed as employed and 26,950 were listed as unemployed.
The governing party welcomed the news, saying it is evidence that Christie and his team are moving the economy in the right direction.
While it was only a slight decrease, Minister of State for Finance Michael Halkitis said it was good news nonetheless.
But unlike August 2011, the PLP had no concerns that the Department of Statistics did not count discouraged workers — that group of people who are willing to work but who have become so discouraged they have given up looking for work.
Back then when the department released numbers showing that the rate had dropped from 14.2 percent to 13.7 percent, the PLP criticized statisticians who had conducted the survey.
In fact, the party staged a demonstration. That’s right, a demonstration, placards and all.
During that protest, Elizabeth MP Ryan Pinder said unless discouraged workers are added to the unemployment figure, the overall statistics are “misleading”.
At the same protest, Halkitis said the Ingraham administration was excluding those numbers in an effort to show that the economy is turning around.
Why is no one in the PLP demanding that discouraged workers be included in the latest calculation of the unemployment rate? Could it be because they are now in power?
At the time of that 2011 protest, Director of the Department of Statistics Kelsie Dorsett fired back, saying both the PLP and the FNM too often use the statistics to gain political points.
“Both the Free National Movement and the Progressive Liberal Party have short-term memories when it comes to how the process works,” Dorsett told The Guardian.
With politicians flip-flopping on so many issues like unemployment numbers, it is likely that the electorate will become even more suspicious, jaded, skeptical and untrusting of politicians.
After all, nobody loves a hypocrite.
February 18, 2013