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High-level slackness and vulgar legacies

January 19, 2014 | By | Filed Under Letters 

 

DEAR EDITOR, The photo circulating of this country’s leader gyrating behind a woman (also known as ‘backballing&rsquo at the army’s Old Year’s Night bash epitomises the vulgarity, slackness, depravity and lewdness of the two most recent presidencies. It reminds us of the no-limits approach that typifies the rule of both individuals, a period when Guyana has slouched into its most immoral, crass and contemptible mould. The ‘backball’ is a naturally vulgar dance. Its inherent obscenity is magnified when it is performed in any public sphere and moreso when it is performed in public settings where dignitaries such as the leaders of this country are attending. Shame on the GDF and the President. The latter is following in the ‘backballing’ footsteps of his predecessor, a man who had no problem receiving a ‘backball’. It confirms how tragically leadership in this country has declined under the last two presidencies. This shameful incident validates the belief among Guyanese that the moral compasses of both men have gone awry. It must also be said that the women who have ‘backballed’ both of these men obviously felt no powerful respect for them, to the extent that these women felt perfectly comfortable to do what they did. It seems these women must have felt these men were tolerant of indignity and tawdriness and receptive to indecency, and they were proved right. Cheddi Jagan, Forbes Burnham and Desmond Hoyte never engaged in this lewdness or entertained such advances, nor did they remotely give off ‘vibes’ that they would allow such scandalous behaviour. What is worse with this sordidness is this is not the first time this has occurred nor is it the first time public figures have commented on this behaviour by the two leaders. Stella Ramsaroop wrote an article titled “Presidential backball” on October 15, 2011 during the height of the PPP election campaign when our two most recent leaders received “backballs” at their rallies. There was outrage at the smuttiness of their conduct then. Proper leaders would have heeded the moral warnings from these public commentaries. It seems like our current leader did not care about the public consternation from the last time he was ‘backballed’ or he sees nothing morally decrepit with it, which is why he went right ahead and had another ‘backball’. What can we expect from a man whose ascension to the presidency has been a terrible continuation of the politics of his predecessor? In a country where women are routinely treated like garbage by many men, ‘backballing’ presidents gyrating on bent over women is clearly the kind of absurd message the leaders of this country must not send to these brutalized women. If a man with all the powers available to the presidency would do nothing different from the tarnished legacy of his predecessor, why should we expect him to stop ‘backballing’? How could the leader of a party filled with crudity and boorishness and constantly celebrating ineptitude find the courage to morally refuse a backball if he lacks the stomach to do the right thing within his own party? Our last two presidents have ‘backballed’ all over Guyana, and our nation seems to be going further into a hole of immorality, vulgarity and profanity. At this rate, the Guyanese people have no chance of ever getting up off the floor again. “Backballing” is in the nature of some among us, it is part of their innate core willingness to engage in slackness at the drop of a hat. And in the above cases, the administrations are a reflection of these ‘backballing’ atrocities. It is no wonder this country wakes up every day to a new act of wrongness and nastiness that the leaders turn around and defend to the hilt. M. Maxwell

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Presidential backball

 
(Originally published in Guyana’s Stabroek News on 15 October 2011)    
These two words, presidential backball, seem contradictory – as if  the two words should never be uttered in the same breath. Indeed, there  ought to be respect when the word “president” comes across our lips.  Backball, on the other hand, is a lewd word, something we hope our  children do not mutter until they are adults.
Yet we are  begrudgingly forced to join these two paradoxical words as we consider  the conduct of President Bharrat Jagdeo and the PPP Presidential  Candidate, Donald Ramotar, who both  received backballs at their party’s recent rallies. I honestly cannot  even believe that I am forced to talk about such coarse behaviour, but  talk about it I must and so I shall.
The Urban Dictionary defines  backball as a “Caribbean term for sensually gyrating in a forward bent  over position, most often in front of a male while partying, sometimes  also touching the ground with hands. Referred to as receiving by males  and giving by females.”
This type of conduct is something that  should be done in private, or at the very least in a dark room at a club full of people who are doing the same thing. It does not belong on the  platform of a political rally in front of all and sundry – including  children and impressionable young people.
However, my focus for this column is to draw a clear and concise line on how the crucial issue of domestic violence relates to the president  of a country receiving a public backball. Common sense tells us that  this type of public behaviour is inappropriate for any leader, much less the president of a country, but allow me to connect the dots for those  who still do not seem to get it.
You see, as long as women are  sexualised and objectified by society, they will never obtain the  respect necessary for men to stop treating them as mere objects that can be toyed with, abused and discarded. Therefore, reducing women to  objects of sexuality at a political rally by putting them in a permanent  ‘club’ atmosphere perpetuates domestic violence.
With the depth  of disregard and contempt displayed to the women of Guyana by these  leaders, is it any wonder that so many women are being beaten, raped,  tortured and murdered everyday? How will the youth of today ever learn  to form healthy and respectful relationships when their leaders do not  seem to know about healthy and respectful relationships?
To make  matters even worse, Mr Ramotar is married! After speaking with Mr  Ramotar about his wife earlier this summer, I believed he held her in  high regard. However, no husband who respects his wife that would do  what he did on that stage last weekend. It would seem the president is  being a bad influence on Mr Ramotar.
Sexual harassment is a form  of sex discrimination. The legal definition of sexual harassment is  “unwelcome verbal, visual or physical conduct of a sexual nature that is severe or pervasive and affects working conditions or creates a hostile work environment.”
The fact that most of those on the stage at  last weekend’s rally in Kitty were being paid by the PPP or the  government made that situation a hostile working environment for the  women. Moreover, that the conduct in question was done in front of  “thousands” of attendees and then broadcast throughout the nation and  put on the Internet to go throughout the world, it then created a  hostile living environment for all Guyanese women.
Minister of  Human Services, Priya Manickchand, knows the definition of sexual  harassment. She also knows what a hostile working environment is. She  knows the only way domestic violence will stop in Guyana is by changing  the existing social norms that degrade women.
Why has the Minister not put an end to this demeaning behaviour toward women? Why has she  not, at the very least, condemned the shameful conduct? In fact, it  would seem the entire PPP elite needs a comprehensive sensitivity  training course. Madam Manickchand, if you want men to start respecting  the women of Guyana, you need to start with the men in your own party.
Women should be seen at these political rallies giving stirring political  speeches focused on how they are going to participate in transforming  the country. We should see them displaying their intelligence, their  ideas, their platform and their plans. Women attending the rallies  should be seen as potential voters who want to make informed choices at  the polls. They should not being objects of sexuality.
The media  incessantly bombards us with sexualised images of women. Kaieteur News  gives us a pretty face to look at every Sunday. But the government of  Guyana should be leading the country in a different direction. The men  of the PPP should be the standard to which the men of the nation can  look for an example of how to treat a woman. God forbid they use the  example they see now from the men in the PPP.
I do not know of any other president or presidential candidate who could behave in such a  vulgar way in view of the whole world and still continue in that role.  Any other political party would have publicly shamed them and attempted  to save face by saying it would never happen again. The PPP has done no  such thing, which leads one to assume it is just fine with their leaders disrespecting Guyana’s women.
It is not fine. It is not ok. In  fact, the President and the PPP presidential candidate owe the women of  Guyana an apology for further perpetuating the already insufferable  situation in which they live. But let’s be honest. An apology will not  be forthcoming. If these men did not esteem women enough to refrain from public backballing in the first place, they will not find enough regard for women to apologise now.
Mitwah

I wonder what Rev the GNI Vulgarity Police have to say?

 

I do not know of any other president or presidential candidate who could behave in such a  vulgar way in view of the whole world and still continue in that role.  Any other political party would have publicly shamed them and attempted  to save face by saying it would never happen again. The PPP has done no  such thing, which leads one to assume it is just fine with their leaders disrespecting Guyana’s women.
It is not fine. It is not ok. In  fact, the President and the PPP presidential candidate owe the women of  Guyana an apology for further perpetuating the already insufferable  situation in which they live. But let’s be honest. An apology will not  be forthcoming. If these men did not esteem women enough to refrain from public backballing in the first place, they will not find enough regard for women to apologise now.

 

 

Mitwah

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