The Rottweiler’s Revenge

By Dr Selwyn R. Cudjoe
July 19, 2025

Dr. Selwyn R. CudjoeOne wonders if Penny Beckles, her happy band of warriors, and Marvin Gonzales, her re-engineered rottweiler, understand the essence of democracy and the implications of an anticipated redistribution of our country’s population numbers in 2030. They promise to wage a gallant battle on behalf of the CEPEP workers, but all I see is “hate, bitterness, acrimony, animosity,…[people] out of control …[and] acting as raging bulls”. (Express, October 21, 2009).
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Singing for one’s supper

By Dr Selwyn R. Cudjoe
July 12, 2025

Dr. Selwyn R. CudjoeSOONER OR LATER “de chupid” talk was bound to happen. “Cudjoe singing for his supper” and he’s “being paid off with a board appointment”. A PNM sycophant sent me a note: “Singing for your supper. You are no longer a [sic] advocate for poor black people director Cudjoe….Sing, boy, sing. It was never about true [sic] to power but to secure opportunities for yourself. Cudjoe my shame. Africans for sale.”
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Permanent poverty

By Raffique Shah
July 12, 2025

Raffique ShahAfter researching the Internet extracting information that would lead me to a possible exit from the suffering that poverty imposes on people, I concluded that the way out of poverty is to ignore those who are stricken by its malafides.

Poverty spares not one country. Even the wealthy countries have vagrants. Some of the brightest minds, backed by generous funding for university and other research agencies, have attempted to peer behind the tattered curtains that shroud poverty. Their conclusions and possible solutions are jokes. When calypsonian the Mighty Shadow (Winston Bailey) belted out his thought-provoking theories in song, he achieved nothing. Not the money earned from the sale of the song, mark you.
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Crocodile tears

By Dr Selwyn R. Cudjoe
July 05, 2025

Dr. Selwyn R. CudjoeThe tears flowed copiously. A United National Congress Government had broken its key promise, “When UNC wins everybody wins”; some people, it seems, have lost. In the seven weeks of its administration the Government suspended CEPEP contractors, and by extension 10,000 workers who made $120 a day or $28,000 working 48 weeks a year.
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A little manners won’t hurt

By Raffique Shah
July 05, 2025

Raffique ShahI am intrigued by Trade Minister Kama Maharaj’s plan to focus on tourism as one of the main pillars of the new economy. It seems to me that every government that has taken the reins of office over the past 30 years has had tourism in its sights. There is always a promise to woo tourists to this country but they hardly materialise in any significant manner.

I say this not to be critical of tourism as a contributor to the economy of our country. However, there are few countries that have benefited in any significant manner such that they could rely on tourism for improving their foreign exchange earnings and providing jobs that we normally associate with economic growth and social benefits.
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Demonising Mamdani

By Dr Selwyn R. Cudjoe
June 28, 2025

Dr. Selwyn R. CudjoeI arrived in New York on Thursday. The cooling breeze was welcomed. It was not as hot as Tuesday when New York City’s JFK airport reached 102 degrees Fahrenheit, the hottest temperature recorded since 2013, while Central Park “broke a record set all the way back in 1888”. (June 23, New York Daily News.)

However, the weather on Tuesday did not prepare New Yorkers for the political tsunami that disrupted the city that day. Zohran Kwame Mamdani, a Muslim of Uganda heritage, defeated Andrew Cuomo, former governor of New York State and a scion of a prominent New York political family, in the Democratic primary for mayor.
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An uncertain future

By Raffique Shah
June 28, 2025

Raffique ShahMany years ago, when I was in my 20s, issues like the state of our national economy didn’t just stimulate my curiosity, but provoked my interest in my country’s future. Then, “UWI Men” such as Lloyd Best, Dr James Millette, and a fella who went by the fancy name “John La Guerre” were interviewed at budget time and invariably pronounced ominously on our future. Anytime those fellas intervened in anything to do with the national economy, they would find doom and gloom.
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