- Too much eye-pass -insulting the intelligence of Guyanese
- Too much thieving without at least building something to distract from such thievery
Burnham insulted Guyanese intelligence and our response was migration. He died and the world changed when the Berlin Wall came down.
This PPP has insulted and shamed Guyanese for too long (since Cheddi died in 1997) and there is no Berlin Wall to come down and you can't depend on evil men to pass on as a cure.
Here's why the PPP will go.
- In the first elections in Guyana with an impact from social media you're seeing an outpouring of angst.
- You're seeing notable Guyanese joining the AFC and the AFC-APNU coalition - reminiscent of when Ted Kennedy and Caroline Kennedy came out in support of Obama and Evangelicals start putting Obama-Biden posters in the lawns of Alabama and Kentucky.
- There is a change atmosphere after 18 years of a Jagdeo-dominated PPP.
I often wondered why Guyanese are inured to the killings that have not wrought arrests, let alone prosecution and convictions.
I often wondered why Guyanese see the Pradovilles and Mercedes of individuals who didn't own a donkey cart or a GCE or CXE qualifications and can't form a proper sentence, and bothered not to question this state of affairs.
I often wondered why with all the drug-related incidents and government thumbprints Guyanese are not outraged.
I often wondered why with all the corrupt procurement (new GPC); Internet bandwidth; and infrastructure projects with no rhyme and reason Guyanese bothered not to ask why.
I often wondered why Guyanese are not chagrined that lesser countries are advancing in many metrics of development and Guyana is stuck in a 20th century way of doing business and production.
I wonder no more as I see the energy, effervescence and fresh breath of multiracial coming together in a common front. Guyanese are demanding dignity - dignity in its social infrastructure, dignity in the conduct of government affairs. I see Guyanese looking at examples of past PNC brushing aside the UF in a coalition and theft of power, and of soldiers backing an undemocratic government and say this time: na lang time.