Politics has been variously described as the exercise of power. In almost all societies political power is being used to redistribute State's wealth and assets to cronies. The Republicans are good at this and Bush/Cheney was the master at it. This is why the Kock Brothers, Adelson et al are pouring so much money into the Romney campaign. They must get back this power.
In Guyana, Burnham did much the same, but he was an amateur at it or he kept it mostly for himself or there wasn't much to go around. Today's Guyana is a classic study in such behavior. Sometimes a leader says I will take you somewhere and I will have to do it the authoritarian way and I don't care much for a supporting structure. That's why Jagdeo did so many big things his way (and you can dispute the soundness of the many projects), run rough-shod over anyone in his way, didn't care that numb nuts hang around him, and made Burnham look like a choir boy. Today's Ramotar is in a holding pattern trying to fend off the boomerangs from the Jagdeo experiment. Jagdeo meanwhile salivates at the possibilities after a one-term hiatus.
The "B"s or Bees have carved their own niche in the lexicon of Guyanese discourse. The Brians, and other names with B, have a socio-economic history that would make a magician yearn. The level of incest, suicides. alcoholism, a disdain for other people's lives, a general lack of interest in the environment, especially in Georgetown - these are seen as necessary collateral in the pursuit of goals deemed more important than how you achieve them. You look at assets being parceled off with alacrity and you wonder where are the guardians.
I just returned from a visit to Guyana and I'm numbed at the dichotomy of progress amidst a trajectory that's far from uplifting. Guyana still is a cradle for the type of people who can make us cry for Guyana.