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plato
Joined: 08 Nov 2003 Posts:
12
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Posted: Wed Feb 04, 2004
10:54 pm Post
subject: The Bahamas... A Corrupt Society |
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The Bahamas has degraded
into a corrupt, depraved society.
Exactly what is a
corrupt, depraved society? A corrupt, depraved society is one
in which the people, en masse, have lost their moral sense. It
is not one in which people sin. It is one in which people have
lost their bias against sin. It is not one in which people
commit adultery. It is one in which people condone and accept
adultery. It is not one in which people commit immoral acts.
It is one in which people accept and condone immorality. It is
a loss of moral values, moral knowledge and moral sense. It is
The Bahamas!
Former Zambian president, Dr. Kenneth
Kaunda, says corrupt leaders create a corrupt society. Clearly
that is the problem in The Bahamas.
Politicians,
because they occupy high positions in Bahamian society, are
expected to have the highest levels of integrity and not
corruption, remembering always that they are servants of the
people. This concept is completely foreign to Bahamian
politicians who have plundered the public purse and held down
economic development in the nation for decades.
Leaders are supposed to be in the forefront in the
fight against corruption by leading their people by example.
The moral standing of any society is determined by the
integrity and honesty of the leadership.
Integrity and
honesty are virtually non-existent in Bahamian political
parties, all of which lack any real ideological standing.
Integrity and honesty are difficult to find in the Bahamas
business community as well.
Political leaders are
supposed to be guided by certain virtues that secure the
economic interests and political influence of groups divided
along the lines of class, race, ethnicity, gender, religion
and other social criteria. Leaders acting only to benefit
themselves or a narrow portion of society, which in The
Bahamas is the predominant case, are considered corrupt.
No nation can achieve its development goals until it
has ingrained integrity in its people. Corruption is a crime
against an entire nation and virtually everyone involved in
Bahamian politics, except for a select few, are guilty of
blatant corruption.
No country can achieve either its
vision as a genuine and open democratic state nor its
developmental goals until it ingrains integrity in its
people's natural psyche, until tolerance for corruption is
replaced by total rejection of the scourge. In the Bahamas,
acceptance of corruption is growing at an alarming rate. There
is no movement whatsoever to seriously address the problem as
the population seems quite content with having corrupt
polticians lead them further down the path of national
destruction.
Unless political parties ascribe to the
basic conditions of honesty, truthfulness, a commitment to
democratic governance, a clear vision and are committed to
transparency, it will be impossible to fight corruption in The
Bahamas, no matter which political party is in power.
Political parties, in The Bahamas, are themselves
perpetuators of corruption by virtue of their tolerance for
unacceptable conduct. Both major parties accuse the other of
corruption, yet neither party addresses the issue while in
power, save for a cursory promise to "investigate" the matters
at hand. Those investigations, like the Sea Hauler
investigation and the Inagua investigation, go nowhere.
By virtue of their passivity or tolerance of what is
clearly unacceptable behaviour, such as corruption, abuse of
office and mis-allocation of public resources, political
parties in The Bahamas are themselves the major players in
perpetuating corruption, disparity of income, predjudice,
poverty and poor living conditions for the majority of
Bahamians.
In a civil society, guided by the rule of
law, the issue of corruption and responsibility of public
officers and their organisations should indeed take centre
stage, as the negative impact of corruption on society is
clearly devastating. The Bahamas must therefore refrain from
identifying itself as a "civil society", as the rule of law is
either absent or perverted, and the social problems in the
Bahamas are multiplying due to corruption in high places and
poor governance.
The Bahamas is clearly in a state of
moral and social decay as it is ravaged by crime, HIV/AIDS and
corruption.
What is a corrupt society? It is a society
ruled by immoral, wicked men; criminals elected by the
populace, supported by the populace, and shielded from
punishment by their political allies. What is a corrupt
society? The answer is... The Bahamas. | |
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brokeworker
Joined: 16 Dec 2003 Posts:
25
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Posted: Thu Feb 05, 2004
10:07 am Post
subject: Re: The Bahamas... A Corrupt Society |
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| plato wrote: |
Former Zambian president, Dr.
Kenneth Kaunda, says corrupt leaders create a corrupt
society. Clearly that is the problem in The Bahamas.
What is a corrupt society? The answer is... The
Bahamas. |
I remember, shortly
before the 2002 elections, when a caller at a radio station
said that nothing would change, the party would just take
place at someone else's house.
There was an article
from 1966 posted here recently where politicians of the UPB
were on the payroll of certain companies.
Majority
rule wiped them out, sure, except that the new crew was no
different. Many became millionaires under the Pindling regime,
and other's during the FNM administration.
Pindling
introduced many praise-worthy programs, but was never able to
distiguish the forest for the trees, never knew when to quit.
Hubert Ingraham jump-started things for a while, but
seemed to think that doubling the debt was worth it.
So far, Peryy Christie has not produced anything
concrete. Perhaps one of his first achievement will be to open
an employment office in Haiti, while at the same time the job
exchange at Clarence Bain building has not enough money to
print labour exchange forms.
What disappoints me the
most is the Pindling skeletons who are now highly paid
consultants.
The businessmen who pour money in the
election, will come to collect. Many haven't, so they will
back someone else next time.
I guess, if the users of
this website continue to make this much noise, we may soon be
offered a consultant job, and website be
gone. _________________ The broke worker | |
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