brexit1

Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge. Isaac Asimov

I suppose that there is much to be said for a referendum as being highly representative of the democratic process. After all, it entails a direct decision of the majority of the electorate without the overt constraint or influence of the party whip, notional or otherwise, and usually on a matter of their governance. But, as Captain Hutt’s famous dictum concerning the woman in the bikini, while that which the process reveals may be interesting, what it conceals is vital!

This comment is owed to the outcome of Thursday’s referendum on the continuation of European Union (EU) membership by Britain, a result that ended in victory for those who clamoured for Britain’s departure from the grouping under the rubric of “Brexit” –or British exit. This development has prompted the resignation of the British Prime Minister, Mr David Cameron, itself a denouement that is as logical as it is surprising.

Logical, because Mr Cameron was in the vanguard of those who championed the vote that Britain should remain as part of the EU and as he put it, “ the country requires fresh leadership to take it in its new direction…” Admittedly, in spite of the inherent chameleon-like adaptation of the political view seemingly to suit any circumstance, it does appear patently incongruous for the newly exited jurisdiction to be led by someone who had expressly staked his political future on the country taking a different path.

Surprising, nevertheless, because it was just over one year ago that Mr Cameron assumed the Prime Ministership of the UK with a handy parliamentary majority. Could an electorate be so fickle as to change its collective mind as to the direction in which the nation should go? The recent referendum might suggest a “yes” answer to that query; in other words, an assertion that while we would want you to lead the country, we do not necessarily agree with your every measure. There should be a cautionary tale or in modern-speak, a teachable moment, in this hypothesis for all political leaders.

It may also be part of a larger contemporary theme, what I have chosen to call the quirk of democracy. Sir Winston Churchill is usually credited with the dictum “Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others…” This aphorism would resonate with the populist who perceives the project of governance as a straight contest between an endowed political class and a powerless people who struggle mightily against the odds to eke out an existence.

Nevertheless, it masks the fact that too much democracy may itself mutate into tyranny and political anomie. For example, a report in yesterday’s Washington Post informs us that many British people were on Thursday evening frantically “googling” what the EU is, mere hours after voting to leave it. This caricature is symptomatic of many modern democratic choices where the popular lemming-like instinct to follow some herd rather than to undertake the essential civic discipline of seeking knowledge and thinking for oneself on an issue appears to predominate.

It is scarcely surprising therefore that Mr Donald Trump, the controversial presumptive Republican nominee for the upcoming presidential election in the US, confessed to loving the “poorly educated”. It would have been erroneous to read this simply as having to do entirely with academic ability or the lack thereof. Indeed, he was speaking of those who, like him, base their knowledge on what they have heard only- mostly on television- and whose reading is limited to tattler magazines such as the National Enquirer or the World News Daily Report, where it is boasted that all articles are “entirely fictional” and that any resemblance to the truth is “purely a miracle”.

Yet, the modern notion of democracy would accord as much value to such views as to any others. Isaac Asimov disputes this as “false” in the epigraph, but the constitutional reality states otherwise.

In a brilliant essay for the New York Times Magazine in May, Andrew Sullivan advanced the argument, borrowed from Plato’s Republic, that democracy contains the seeds of its own destruction and that democracies end when they become too democratic. According to this provocative thesis, “democracy is a political system of maximal freedom and equality, where every lifestyle is allowed and public offices are filled by a lottery. And the longer a democracy lasted, Plato argued, the more democratic it would become. Its freedoms would multiply; its equality spread. Deference to any sort of authority would wither; tolerance of any kind of inequality would come under intense threat; and multiculturalism and sexual freedom would create a city or a country like “a many-colored cloak decorated in all hues.”

It is this apocalyptic scenario, Sullivan argues, that might account for the stunning early popularity of Trumpism. He continues the nightmare; “as the authority of elites fades, as Establishment values cede to popular ones, views and identities can become so magnificently diverse as to be mutually uncomprehending. And when all the barriers to equality, formal and informal, have been removed; when everyone is equal; when elites are despised and full license is established to do “whatever one wants,” you arrive at what might be called late-stage democracy. There is no kowtowing to authority here, let alone to political experience or expertise”.

When we consider that one of the major casualties of this “end-time” is the establishment politician, the ascendancy of Trumpism in the US and the success of the Brexit campaign in the UK are scarcely cause for surprise. They may in fact be the obverse and inverse of the same coin.

Are there any lessons in this context for Barbados and the rest of the region? Certainly, we are not currently contemplating a Bar-exit from CARICOM, although I do not sense that in such an event there would be much difference in a local result from that on Thursday in Britain.

In any case, CARICOM’s relative weakness as a regulatory entity may be its greatest strength. One of the “Brexiters” beefs was that the European Parliament and Court were seen as intrusively over-regulating local practices. Here, contrastingly, CARICOM is not legislatively competent and the jurisdiction of the regional court, at least in its appellate division, has been ignored so far by more than half of the member states.

134 responses to “The Jeff Cumberbatch Column – The Quirk of Democracy”


  1. @Vincent

    Ireland and Scotland cannot ‘pullout’ form the Kingdom just so. They have to apply for membership in the EU but first the parliament of England have to approve because as a unitary state this is the authority England has over Wales, N.Ireland and Scotland. Bear in mind if the EU accepts membership from the three there is Spain to manage.

  2. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    S&P said ‪#‎Brexit‬ could lead to “a deterioration of the UK’s economic performance”.

    http://bbc.in/295BFp1

    David June 27, 2016 at 3:24 PM #

    The point is that while the grass is growing(i.e. negotiations with EU and discussions with Ireland and Scotland) the Cow is starving(Investor confidence is suffering,deals will be delayed untill agreements are reached)……time is of the essence…….both parties have to get their acts together in a hurry as elections are looming before year end.

  3. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    The European Union will not hold informal talks with the UK until it triggers Article 50 to leave, Germany, France and Italy have insisted.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel hosted talks with French President Francois Hollande and Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi in Berlin.

    The leaders called for a “new impulse” to strengthen the EU.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-36644211


  4. @pudryr

    you seem to be reading the wrong tea leaves.

    just observing


  5. John Oliver and his Brexit aftermath

  6. de pedantic Dribbler. Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler.

    @David June 27, 2016 at 3:24 PM reasonable men and women can argue that Scotland should rightly be given special status to remain in the EU because of their current status as a member who has been derailed from the union through no fault of their own.

    But of course as you said the British parliament has to approve their secession/Independence.

    And the question then has to be answered why or how can the Brits refuse Scotland’s request to leave when they themselves were able to exercise their free will.

    Democracy and anarchy…back to that we go.

    Brexit could become the ideal case study for the perfect MBA course project paper on Management: The Importance of Strategic and Effective Decision Making.

    This is a whopper of a poorly thought out action!!!

  7. Vincent Haynes Avatar
    Vincent Haynes

    Listen to Scotland on this video.

    “We have no intention whatsoever of seeing Scotland taken out of Europe.”

    Scottish National Party (SNP)’s Angus Robertson says that he refuses to be part of a “diminished little Britain”.

    https://www.facebook.com/Channel4News/videos/10153849991716939/

  8. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ AC

    I see what you mean as per the Donald and my comments.

    I have to admit that I do not have too much admiration for the man.

    My grandfather used to say “that man is so stupid if you were to transplant his brain in a blackbird it will fly backwards”

    But having said that I fear the lemmings syndrome that the majority of the US population represents.

    @ Observing

    Discernment by tea leaves used to be a proper job in Rasputin times lolol.

    There are intrinsically more DLP supporters in Barbados than BLP and or should I say AND more of them believe and have drunken deeply from the jug of cool aid that advocates that the DLP is for the average man.

    You are from the “timbre or your tone” as if a man can see through writings, not a Q in the community man, nor a fellow wh frequents Banks Limes or the Guiness Rumshp hours and the five banks for the price of fours.

    Relief for we poor people comes in 20 banks, soberly shared out between your drinking buddies.

    Let de ole man give you a lesson in poverty in de ghetto.

    When things tight you doan left the Johnny Walker bottle without tightening the cap and a guard gets posted buy the unfinished bottles of Alleyne Arthur

    Chicken wing portions being sold decrease and the price increases.

    Pretty girls stand up with their bittle dry all night while men drinking their selfish beers and not offering a looker a drink DEM is my tea leaves of poverty in and among the people who going vote Donville out.

    What you and the rest of the passers by see is not whu a gwan in we ghetto, it rough my man, it rough.

    Go into Mia Mottley constituency office and sit down a day go int the opposition party’s offices and what you see/hear there is the actuality of a people, tired with the empty promises of the party in power, using their street smarts an going to the opposition party’s offices and tacitly saying “I went to the other efforts and the could not hep me, now I heah”

    “If you give me a job I going vote for you”

    Dat is my tea leaves my man

    De DLP gone and going lef you to ruminate pun which Q in de community you feel safe to go to befo 6p.m. And de gun shots to test de ole man ramblings.

    “Eyes Wide Shut”

  9. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Here is a lesson for us all …what don’t happen in 800 years can happen in a nanosecond….mankind’s fantasies and delusions of grandeur can only stretch so far and no further.

    The leaders who have intelligence sees this is as plain as day and will move forward to real progress, the idiots will wait to see what UK does, UK don’t know what to do but they will break fir themselves.

    ……Scotland and Ireland needs to stay with EU..well away from UK, but they have to fight, but it’s a fight which will be well worth it. As it stands UK has way too many fires to put out.

    ACs and Alvin…what’s Fruendel doing, still waiting…lol

  10. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Not efforts I typed effers steupseee dis IPad getting me tired


  11. David Cameron gambled and lost.The pound sterling is at its lowest peg in 32 years,against the US dollar.The United Kingdom is about to break up,Moody’s,S&P and now Fitch have all downgraded the economic outlook of the U.K. and Iceland put England out of the European Cup.Both Cameron’s and Hodgson’s ships are sinking.
    There is a way out.Cameron can dissolve parliament and call new elections.The new government can ignore the referendum and life with the EU continues.Lessons will be learnt in all the EU.When you allow a referendum to determine a fundamental issue like maintaining a Federal Government or membership in a Common Union of like minded States,forget the referendum.The lumpen proletariat,which is usually the majority do not know a right decision from a wrong one.Sometimes an attractive candidate or the colour of a currency note,or an iPad,a radio,a smartphone or brand name gear,might sway an outcome that is the determinant of life or death for development decisions and a country’s prosperity.


  12. @pudryr
    While I agree with lofty lyrics of libation and poetic prose on poverty the realities of an electorate the likes of which elected Trump and Brexited Cameron tells me that nothing is written in stone nor can familiarity and fickleness be underestimated.

    Had “we” a stronger opposition. I may wax solemnly with you on the demise of DEM but alas those on the other side are too BEEtwixt, BEEtween and BEEwitched for my leaves to encircle Mi Amor with any confidence.

    Tis a long time before the bell tolls. Time will thus tell the tall tale then.

    Just observing


  13. @PUDRYR

    An indication how well positioned is Donville is to answer the following question. Has anybody been canvassing the constituency on behalf of the BLP?


  14. Britian is in hot doo next a race war on the horizon.News out of the BBC seems to be getting worse for Britain. Who would reign in the mad horse now it is out of the barn.plenty feathers flying. Investors futures on all to time low .credit rating agencies using the black pen.people asking what next

  15. Georgie Porgie Avatar
    Georgie Porgie

    lofty lyrics of libation and poetic prose on poverty

    GOOD ALITTERATION!


  16. “Surprising, nevertheless, because it was just over one year ago that Mr Cameron assumed the Prime Ministership of the UK with a handy parliamentary majority. Could an electorate be so fickle as to change its collective mind as to the direction in which the nation should go? The recent referendum might suggest a “yes” answer to that query; in other words, an assertion that while we would want you to lead the country, we do not necessarily agree with your every measure. ”

    Surprising to me as well because I did not view the outcome of the referendum as a test of his mandate to lead the country. True he has only himself to blame for the pickle in which he finds himself having resurrected an issue about which the British electorate was prepared to grumble but bear.


  17. This is why so many people in the UK have lost faith in politics. A coup is being planned against the current leader of the main oppostion party by his fellow MP’S. Two thirds of his shadow cabinet bench have just resigned.

    Never mind that this man was given the biggest ever mandate of any Labour leader in history to lead his party.

    Yes, we are living in a very interesting period.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-36638041

  18. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    ACs…yall starting to be afraid, then ya better be careful they dont get up the nerve to go down to the Caribbean and tell ya go back to Africa.., yall like kissing ass in Barbadod so anything can play.., brace for more.


  19. @Gabriel
    There is a way out.Cameron can dissolve parliament and call new elections.
    ++++++++++
    Not gonna happen, Cameron has already declared that he is leaving any attempt to dissolve Parliament would be seen as a naked grab to retain power.

    Cameron is out, the front runners for the job are Boris and Theresa May.


  20. @David
    Have you listed to Governor Carney and also what Exchequer Osborne have had to say?
    +++++++++
    There is a phrase for that is called ”whistling past the graveyard”.

    BTW if Boris becomes PM Carney is out, he was on the “Remain” side and the PM will not have a Gov of the Bank of England with such a fundamental difference in economic approach, also Carney is seen as a creature of Osbourne another “Remain” politician. Carney is Canadian who came to the job from the Bank of Canada and it is easy to jettison a Colonial.


  21. Sealy stated that although the United Kingdom (UK) is Barbados’ biggest source market, “that is the case now, it was the case last week, and it will be the case next week, whether they are part of the EU or not”.

    Then there is this more measured but logical opinion.

    ““Every aspect of Caribbean life will be adversely affected by this development; from trade relations to immigration, tourism to financial relations and cultural engagements to foreign policy,” Sir Hilary said in a media release yesterday.

    “There will be a significant redefinition and reshaping of CARICOM -UK engagements. The region’s fragile economic recovery is threatened,” he said further.”


  22. LOL @ Hants
    Bushie was wondering if it was Sealy who briefed Froon for his CBC interview on Friday. Sealy was saying the same shiite about how basically nothing has changed – and ‘we will monitor the situation and respond as needed’.

    Respond shiite!! ….they will probably hire Maloney and Bizzy via a BOLT project, to build a road to London so that their ‘long-term regulars’ could just walk over…
    ….another $100M down the drain..

  23. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.barbadostoday.bb/2016/06/27/what-fallout/

    Sealy is a jackass, he knows why he is lying. Listening to lying politicians got UK people in that mess. The pound is falling to the US dollar…that never happens, people do not travel in times of uncertainty.

    The same lying government ministers told bajans that the worldwide recession could not affect that is despite the credit rating agencies and IMF repeatedly warning to the contrary…just see how that turned out.

    Do not listen to politicians. People in the Caribbean now have to be mindful and very vigilant…particularly in Barbados, that these same lying politicians dont sell them into something worse than slavery, it is not beneath them, they would sell their mamas.

    Selling out their people and waiting on the UK is the only thing black politicians know…ask Fruendel.

    Do not listen to politicians.

    Do not trust politicians.

  24. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    “22 minutes ago

    Farage tells MEPs they have mostly “never done a day’s work in their lives”

    Nigel Farage has spoken at the special session of the European Parliament. He appealed to MEPs for a “grown up” approach to Britain’s vote to leave, while also taking great joy in insulting his colleagues.

    At one point in his speech, the Ukip leader suggested a failure to reach a new trade agreement would hurt the EU more than it would hurt Britain – at which point his fellow MEPs openly laughed at him.

    Here is the full transcript of what Mr Farage had to say:

    You all laughed at me – well I have to say, you’re not laughing now, are you. The reason you’re so upset, you’re so angry, has been perfectly clear, from all the angry exchanges this morning.

    You as a political project are in denial. You’re in denial that your currency is failing. Just look at the Mediterranean!
    As a policy to impose poverty on Greece and the Mediterranian you’ve done very well.

    You’re in denial over Mrs Merkel’s call for as many people as possible to cross the Mediterranean – which has led to massive divisions between within countries and between countries.

    The biggest problem you’ve got and the main reason the UK voted the way it did is because you have by stealth and deception, and without telling the truth to the rest of the peoples of Europe, you have imposed upon them a political union.

    When the people in 2005 in the Netherlands and France voted against that political union and rejected the constitution you simply ignored them and brought the Lisbon treaty in through the back door.

    What happened last Thursday was a remarkable result – it was a seismic result. Not just for British politics, for European politics, but perhaps even for global politics too.

    Because what the little people did, what the ordinary people did – what the people who’d been oppressed over the last few years who’d seen their living standards go down did – was they rejected the multinationals, they rejected the merchant banks, they rejected big politics and they said actually, we want our country back, we want our fishing waters back, we want our borders back.

    We want to be an independent, self-governing, normal nation. That is what we have done and that is what must happen. In doing so we now offer a beacon of hope to democrats across the rest of the European continent. I’ll make one prediction this morning: the United Kingdom will not be the last member state to leave the European Union.

    The question is what do we do next? It is up to the British government to invoke article 50 and I don’t think we should spend too long in doing it. I totally agree that the British people have voted, we need to make sure that it happens.

    What I’d like to see is a grownup and sensible attitude to how we negotiate a different relationship. I know that virtually none of you have never done a proper job in your lives, or worked in business, or worked in trade, or indeed ever created a job. But listen, just listen.

    You’re quite right Mr Schultz – Ukip used to protest against the establishment and now the establishment protests against Ukip. Something has happened here. Let us listen to some simple pragmatic economics – my country and your country, between us we do an enormous amount of business in goods and services.

    That trade is mutually beneficial to both of us, that trade matters. If you were to cut off your noses to spite your faces and reject any idea of a sensible trade deal the consequences would be far worse for you than it would be for us.

    [Laughter from MEPs]

    Even no deal is better for the United Kingdom is better than the current rotten deal that we’ve got. But if we were to move to a position where tariffs were reintroduced on products like motorcars then hundreds of thousands of German works would risk losing their jobs.

    Why don’t we be grown up, pragmatic, sensible, realistic and let’s cut between us a sensible tariff-free deal and thereafter recognise that the United Kingdom will be your friend, that we will trade with you, cooperate with you, we will be your best friends in the world.”

    And am sure they will enslave you if they see themselves going to broke, yhen they will see themselves as the best slave masters in the world, be careful of the politicians, do not trust politicians. .

    Do that, do it sensibly, and allow us to go off and pursue our global ambitions and future.

  25. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ observing

    I too endorse your use of and pertinence with your alliteration

    I just came back here and read all the intervening comments to make sure I got them all

    That was indeed a low blow using what I constantly say about the BLP against me.

    I concur that they are equally bereft of the skills necessary to run our country but I will borrow this line from the UKIP leader

    “Because what the little people did, what the ordinary people did – what the people who’d been oppressed over the last few years who’d seen their living standards go down did …”

    While I am stating the obvious per the universal similarities in five year tenures, what I am relying heavily on is what I see people doing when given the chance to change? Their perceived oppressors.

    In responding I would extend my cliche? answer and hypothesis to you to include the Honourable Blogmaster and submit that based on the prevalent state of disgruntled citizens island wide, BLP canvassing, while not so overtly evident in Donville s constituency, really, for now, does hot have to be employed because people are under serious pressure and if the BLP goes out there openly they are going to have to pull their pockets now, as opposed to when the bell rings


  26. @PUDRYR

    You are wrong. There is no interest in St.James South because the BLP has surrendered the seat.

  27. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Honourable Blogmaster

    I once recall a resident in Bush Hall saying “dem cud run a dog through heah, we gine vote it in”

    It is true that we have to wait until the Bell Rings to know what these fellers going do, i.e. the opposition, but as it relates to the general ambience among Bajans, one does not have to go too far to hear what is being said.

    And one does not need to be a rocket scientist to extrapolate what that is going to mean.

    But time, not tea leaves will tell.

  28. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/82382/barbados-near-debt-darkness

    The lying government ministers are not saying a word about this…not one word.

  29. Colonel Buggy Avatar

    Mia has chided the Prime Ministers over his remarks relating to the worrying gun issue in Barbados, that “guns do not fly and guns do not swim”
    The Prime Minister is in a prime position to comment on the inability to Fly or to Swim…………….being a Lame Duck Prime Minister himself.

  30. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Donna…this should answer your question whether acceptance of liability was given in writing or not or if in wtiting can be ignored. They did offer a settlement, but knowing how some very nasty lawyers operate on the island and she has had 6 of them, I suspect either some or all of the other 5 did what they usually do, make sure they were the ones benefited from her injury, am sure most if not all of them or now dead.

    Adriel Brathwaite should not get one seat in the elections regardless of how many votes he buys, voters should be jntelligent enough to see that both governments would do the same to any citizen or noncitizen who got injured on the island, as they have been doing for decades.

    “Not our fault
    AG insists Gov’t not liable to ailing nurse

    Added by Neville Clarke on June 29, 2016.
    Saved under Health Care, Local News

    inShare
    Government is not liable and therefore cannot be forced to pay any compensation to injured former Queen Elizabeth Hospital nurse Coral Wilkinson.

    However, Attorney General Adriel Brathwaite reminded today the Solicitor General’s Office was prepared to make an “ex gratia payment” to Wilkinson, who fell down a flight of stairs in the antenatal clinic in April 1981 and sustained a slipped disc in her neck and damage to the bone in the lower back which supports her body weight.

    It’s the latest in the near 35-year long battle between Government and the ailing former medical professional.

    Brathwaite spoke briefing to Barbados TODAY on the matter during the luncheon break of today’s sitting of Parliament after Wilkinson’s failed attempt last week to get an audience there with either the AG or Prime Minister Freundel Stuart, complaining that her case was simply dragging on for way too long and she had now reached the end of her tether.

    However, the Attorney General, who is named in a lawsuit which Wilkinson filed against the State a year after her injury, reiterated that even though Government did not accept liability, the former nurse was still offered a sum of money so she could go to England and have the required surgery.

    When the matter was first raised with him last December, Brathwaite had also noted that Wilkinson, through her attorney Sir Richard Cheltenham, QC, had rejected the offer.

    “I see the pain she is going through. I spoke to the attorney and asked him to take a second look at it [the matter of payment] and see how quickly he can get rid of it,” the Attorney General said then.

    It was back in February, 2015 that Crown Counsel Roger Barker, the Government lawyer handling Wilkinson’s case, had written on behalf of Solicitor General Jennifer Edwards offering the injured nurse an ex gratia payment of $145,159.70 for the surgery in the United Kingdom.

    However, Wilkinson’s attorney replied in correspondence dated March 12, 2015 rejecting it on the grounds that the sum offered was insufficient; therefore to accept it was “virtually to condemn her to remaining in her presently helpless condition”.

    Sir Richard’s counter-offer was $400,000, which he contended would cover air travel to and from the UK, accommodation, the expenses of the surgical team, physiotherapy and all other incidentals.

    He argued that Government’s offer did not even cover the cost of the medical team in England whose maximum fee was 33,000 pounds sterling at the time.

    Sir Richard had also asked Government to reconsider its offer, but in a comment on the matter last week the Prime Minister accused the prominent attorney of playing games and of not wanting to see an end to the case.

    Stuart, who confirmed he had listened to the former nurse’s plight as recently as three weeks earlier when she called him at home, said he had first heard of her in 2008 when he served as Attorney General.

    However, the Prime Minister insisted Wilkinson’s lawyer should get a judge to settle the matter.

    “If they are not so happy with the judge’s settlement, appeal it. If they are not happy with what the Court of Appeal says, carry it to the Caribbean Court of Justice. That is how we do business in Barbados.

    “This whole business of not doing anything, or not doing enough, and having her out there believing that somebody has wronged her, or somebody is delinquent in not responding to her [is unfortunate],” Stuart said.

    Sir Richard, who is currently off island, is yet to respond to the Prime Minister and the AG’s latest pronouncements on the matter.

    In the meantime, Wilkinson’s physical health continues to deteriorate. The St Thomas resident said in addition to her mental anguish, in recent months headaches had become a normal part of her existence, while her entire left side was smaller and her right side was getting weaker as she awaited surgery.”

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading