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FM
Former Member

Ok folks.

 

Young and talented Gerhard was rejected by the AFC and neglected a seat in Parliament last election. He was passed over for less qualified individuals.  The PNC now kicks Gerhard while he is down and rejects him as a political asset.

 

Let us rewind and not forget that Gerhard and TK were instrumental in pushing for a merger with the AFC and PNC.

 

Politics is cruel and Gerhard has been kicked to the curb once again by his so called AFC friends who outfoxed Gerhard for second time while securing positions for themselves.

 

Gerhard will show up and pretend not to be interested in politics but that is far from the truth.

 

My advice to Gerhard is to now know who his friends really are.

 

This mistake will cost the AFC and PNC since Gerhard is a major asset. Ok Gerhard, back to Gardening.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Ow yuji, you are so solicitous of Gerhard's welfare. You really care for him. Take this from me, bhai: being a parliamentarian is not the be-all and end-all of political activism. My name was on the 65-strong PPP list in 1985 elections. The PPP won only 7 seats if I am not mistaken. I still continued operating as a PPP activist till early 1992. You have to understand that some people are in politics for what they can give, not for what they can get. Believe me. And stop wringing your hands about Gerhard.

FM

You are a gold teeth low breed idiot.

 

How do you know that Gerhard didn't put his name up for selection to parliament? 

 

BTW for the record Gerhard declined to be selected to be in the last parliament for the AFC. There are many people who can attest to that so quit pretending you know anything you daft fool.

FM
Originally Posted by yuji22:
Originally Posted by TK:
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by TK:

Dude what makes you believe everyone is motivated by dhal soup?

I had some dhal bangla style with nuff coriander for dinner.

Banna that is good stuff.

TK you are contradicting your self here.

What is the contradiction?

FM

Yuji...I don't live in Guyana. I left 13 years ago. Yes...I visit 2-3 times each year. I am fortunate to be able to conduct research on small open economies and get pay for it. I will continue to be involved in research in Guyana, TT, Barbados, Jamaica, Fiji, Botswana, etc. If I ever move south it will be from splendid Sarasota to gorgeous Barbados. My hands are tied. My son will start university in a few months. Your question is not relevant to me. It is however very relevant to Gerhard. Although your question is self-serving; I know you are up to no good...it deserves an answer vis a vis Gerhard. I hope the Alliance has a very good answer.

FM
Originally Posted by TK:

Yuji...I don't live in Guyana. I left 13 years ago. Yes...I visit 2-3 times each year. I am fortunate to be able to conduct research on small open economies and get pay for it. I will continue to be involved in research in Guyana, TT, Barbados, Jamaica, Fiji, Botswana, etc. If I ever move south it will be from splendid Sarasota to gorgeous Barbados. My hands are tied. My son will start university in a few months. Your question is not relevant to me. It is however very relevant to Gerhard. Although your question is self-serving; I know you are up to no good...it deserves an answer vis a vis Gerhard. I hope the Alliance has a very good answer.

TK

 

I have no hard feelings for anyone. I am just here to have good old fashion political fun.

 

Yuji is just a staunch PPP supporter and has no ties to any political party, never has and never will. 

 

I do have a lot of respect for Gerhard and I am expressing my opinion that Gerhard was treated unfairly by the AFC, not once but twice. 

 

You are correct, it is for Gerhard to speak for himself. The AFC should also come clean on Gerhard's absence from the list today. 

 

I accept that fact that you have retired from active Guyanese politics and why not, you have bigger fishes to fry.

 

 

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by HM_Redux:
Originally Posted by TK:
Originally Posted by HM_Redux:

Gerhard resigned from the AFC, you really are thick aren't you?

Who is think, me? You want to play games with me?

What are you pot salt? can you read?

Redux, with all due respect, please keep this thread clean. Start your own if you need to.

FM
Originally Posted by yuji22:
Originally Posted by HM_Redux:
Originally Posted by TK:
Originally Posted by HM_Redux:

Gerhard resigned from the AFC, you really are thick aren't you?

Who is think, me? You want to play games with me?

What are you pot salt? can you read?

Redux, with all due respect, please keep this thread clean. Start your own if you need to.

Haul your gold teeth arse.......

FM

Guyana has become a hopeless hellhole under the PPP

April 7, 2015 | By | Filed Under Letters
 

DEAR EDITOR,

In 1942, the 32nd President of the United States, Franklin Delano Roosevelt said “The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little.” This is a profound statement and a critical indicator of development such as life expectancy, educational attainment, realization of economic goals, and inter-generational advancement. Today, children are born into a Guyana that is massively corrupt and deeply in debt. Having taken his/her first breath, that child already owes hundreds of thousands of dollars to assorted international financial institutions such as the Inter-American Development Bank and the Caribbean Development Bank. Guyana’s foreign debt is in the millions of US dollars (more that 70 percent of its GDP) and frequent devaluations of its already valueless currency result in a skyrocketing of the debt by several millions weekly. Our dollar is not worth anything in comparison to the US dollar. In fact, it has been said that Guyana’s currency is not worth the paper it is printed on. It is considered monopoly money by many. A child born today in Guyana will likely leave high school without passing the required five Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate subjects—the benchmark academic exit achievement for students and standard requirement to matriculate into most tertiary-level institutions. Seven out of 10 students who graduate, do so without passing a single science subject (Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, and Biology). In Guyana, a mother and her baby have a 50/50 chance to survive the miracle of birth. The country’s public hospitals are deplorable and this is why members and their families in the PPP often seek medical treatment in the United States for simple ailments. They do not have confidence in the medical staff and facilities at the public hospitals. Today, the children of Guyana are born into a society where income inequality is worse than Haiti and poverty is second only to that island nation. Nearly 45 per cent, one in two, or some 340,000 Guyanese are living below the poverty line. Their chances of having proper health care beyond birth have rapidly decreased, since most of the public hospital services are in a ramshackle state, with fewer and fewer Guyanese being able to afford even basic health care at the private hospitals. The same is true for education, where more than 6,000 children drop out of schools every year and the chances for many others to graduate high school are slim. Guyana’s economy is among the sickest in the Caribbean. In real terms, Guyanese are no richer today than they were in the 1970s and 1980s. And most of the country’s enduring problems, like its public finances, corruption, high levels of crime, crumbling infrastructure, poor health care and deplorable education system, are the result of over a decade of bad governance and neglect by the PPP regime. Guyana is where it is today primarily because of the abominably low and immoral standards, thievery of state resources, and the vulgar and abusive behaviour of those in authority. Corruption is a debilitating disease, a cancer of the worst type. It has consumed our country. Why is this possible? It is because those in power by and large are not a moral and self-respecting group. Rather, vulgarity, cuss-downs and race-bait politics have become the hallmark of the regime. Incompetents and the least of their intellectual apostles are often placed in top leadership and management positions. The chronic negligence of Georgetown, education, especially UG and the public schools and health care, are classic examples of how the country’s public institutions have been hijacked and destroyed by the least able. City Hall, according the Fire Chief, could collapse at anytime. Nepotism and cronyism are evident in every one of these institutions. Many of the PPP’s unqualified and inexperienced supporters have been rewarded with top positions because of years of loyalty and service to the party. While it is standard for party loyalists to be rewarded with jobs in most if not all advanced liberal democracies as a rule after acquisition of State power, such persons are invariably qualified and competent. Guyana under the Jagdeo/Ramotar regime is the capital of glaring exceptions. The practice of bad governance is totally responsible for Guyana’s dwarfed development, corruption, high unemployment and extreme poverty. They are the worst and the most reviled and vulgar of all the presidents. Jagdeo has become a nuisance to society. He can do the rest of the nation a big favour by just leaving the political scene. Asquith Rose

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by TK:

Dude what makes you believe everyone is motivated by dhal soup?

I had some dhal bangla style with nuff coriander for dinner.

You sure is coriander or cumin.

Both I believe, stuff had a lot of seeds.

I had bake and shark, bangla style.

Mitwah
Last edited by Mitwah
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by TK:

Dude what makes you believe everyone is motivated by dhal soup?

I had some dhal bangla style with nuff coriander for dinner.

You sure is coriander or cumin.

Both I believe, stuff had a lot of seeds.

I had bake and shark, bangla style.

It's been a while since I had shark. Have to try that soon .

FM
Originally Posted by TK:
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by TK:

Dude what makes you believe everyone is motivated by dhal soup?

I had some dhal bangla style with nuff coriander for dinner.

You sure is coriander or cumin.

Both I believe, stuff had a lot of seeds.

I had bake and shark, bangla style.

It's been a while since I had shark. Have to try that soon .

Eat shark, make Gilbakka happy.

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
Originally Posted by TK:
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by Django:
Originally Posted by Sunil:
Originally Posted by TK:

Dude what makes you believe everyone is motivated by dhal soup?

I had some dhal bangla style with nuff coriander for dinner.

You sure is coriander or cumin.

Both I believe, stuff had a lot of seeds.

I had bake and shark, bangla style.

It's been a while since I had shark. Have to try that soon .

Eat shark, make Gilbakka happy.

To be honest I like Gilbakka better...especially the eggs.

FM
Last edited by Former Member

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