Sour Milk A Tasty Treat If You Never Had Fresh Milk:It’s All About Acquiring The Taste For It.…

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The United States is a country of 308 million people, Blacks are reported to be around 12% of the general population, That’s somewhere between 36 and 37 million people. Black Americans were projected to spend approximately 1.1 and 1.5 trillion dollars on goods and services for the year 2015 . Yet estimates projected the bulk of that money would be spent in businesses not owned or operated by other Blacks. In fact the dollar circulates numerous times in the white community. In the Hispanic community the group nearest to Blacks in terms of the dollar circulation the dollar circulates eight (8) times and improving.
In the Black community it circulates less than one time (0). That is a direct sign that we do not own business and we do not support the few black businesses which do exist.

There is a gen­er­al feel­ing in some quar­ters that many of our peo­ple are not inter­est­ed in their own lives. Other crit­ics sug­gest too many of us are com­fort­able in our medi­oc­rity , and to some degree our con­di­tions of depen­dence and a sense of com­fort­a­bil­i­ty may tran­scend Geography as it relates to our people.
There is a cer­tain sense that some of us have no desire to increase our cir­cum­stances beyond the point where we are per­pet­u­al­ly scratch­ing in the dust to main­tain our survival.

After unprece­dent­ed turns at the helm of gov­ern­ment in Jamaica the People’s National Party (PNP) was final­ly vot­ed out of office on the 25th of February, replaced with the Jamaica labor Party(JLP).
The Island reg­is­tered dra­mat­ic changes in the stan­dard of liv­ing since the 1960’s, Unfortunately for the peo­ple their stan­dard of liv­ing has­n’t changed for the bet­ter . The great­est peri­od of pros­per­i­ty was record­ed under the (JLP’s) Leadership of Donald Sangster who died after a brief stint in office and was suc­ceed­ed by High Lawson Shearer.
In 1972 under a bom­bard­ment of hype which con­vinced the Jamaican peo­ple their lives were in bad shape and they need­ed to change course, the Socialist (PNP) was elect­ed in a land­slide and Michael Manley became prime Minister. That 1972 vote effec­tive­ly changed Jamaica in a way that it has not recov­ered from. By 1980 the vot­ers were so dis­il­lu­sioned with Manley and the state of our coun­try that the PNP was boot­ed from office in a 51 – 9 route in the then 60 seat legislature.
The JLP Edward Seaga took the reins and skill­ful­ly turned the econ­o­my around . Many Jamaicans now talk about the 80’s with glazed eyes , hop­ing there could be a return to those days of low crime , low food prices and jobs. Under Edward Seaga a sense of eco­nom­ic sta­bil­i­ty returned and once again Jamaicans were comfortable.
By 1988 they were once again in a flir­ta­tious mood , utter­ly, com­plete­ly and reck­less­ly dis­re­gard­ing the tragedy of the 70’s they returned Manley to power.

Manley did not serve out that term , ill-health forced him to turn over pow­er to his deputy Percival James Patterson. Patterson was to become the longest serv­ing Prime Minister in our young Nation’s his­to­ry. The PNP would remain in office for an unprece­dent­ed 1412 years between Patterson and Portia Simpson Miller.
Patterson’s long tenure was not made pos­si­ble by his good han­dling of the econ­o­my, low crime sta­tis­tics or any oth­er indi­ca­tor, . Conversely peo­ple just gave up on Jamaica , a sense of apa­thy set in. Poverty, decay , and a sense of malaise became the new normal.
It can rea­son­ably be argued that it was under Patterson that Jamaica took a final turn for the worse and has nev­er recovered.

In 2007 Bruce Golding of the JLP won a slim major­i­ty over the PNP’s Portia Simpson Miller. Golding steered the econ­o­my skill­ful away from the brink. He did it with­out an agree­ment with the International Monetary Fund. A series of seem­ing­ly periph­er­al issues eject­ed Bruce Golding from pow­er and by December 29th 2011 the PNP was back in pow­er. The United States demand­ed that under­world fig­ure Christopher (dud­dus) Coke be extra­dit­ed to the United States to stand tri­al and a British inter­view of Golding in which he said no gays would ever be in his cab­i­net result­ed in Golding’s res­ig­na­tion from office.

It did not take long for the PNP led admin­is­tra­tion to be back on it’s knees beg­ging the IMF for an agree­ment . The admin­is­tra­tion secured an IMF deal yes, but meet­ing IMF tar­gets became the new met­ric of the Government’s suc­cess. There was no met­ric which involved growth and devel­op­ment. Passing IMF tests was the high water mark> This had dis­as­trous con­se­quences for work­ers who had to live through wage freezes for the much of the PNP’s term while con­tend­ing with mas­sive price increas­es and high infla­tion. This forced much of the small mid­dle class fur­ther and fur­ther into poverty.
The wage freezes were con­ve­nient­ly lift­ed as soon as it start­ed get­ting close to elec­tion time in 2016.
No one ques­tioned why the very Fund which insist­ed on wage freezes for years was sud­den­ly on board with free­ing the freeze on work­ers salaries.

The PNP admin­is­tra­tion became an IMF dar­ling , why not , whats not to like? The International Monetary Fund is in fact in busi­ness to make mon­ey, the fund does so by extract­ing mas­sive inter­ests on it’s loans from small debtor nations while forc­ing debtor states to adhere to crip­pling poli­cies which brings much pain to their pop­u­la­tions. In the end this is under­stand­able they are in the busi­ness of mak­ing mon­ey I am cool with that .
What may have elud­ed much of the Jamaican peo­ple are the con­di­tions under which Golding was forced from office and how soon after the PNP won the elec­tions of 2011 the new Administration was back beg­ging for a deal.

The Labor par­ty was the par­ty of eco­nom­ic growth, the par­ty of the pri­vate sec­tor, the par­ty of education.….…if these prin­ci­ples are adhered to in small­er debtor nations who would the IMF loan mon­ey to?
If that does­n’t get you think­ing noth­ing will.
Having spent so much time in charge of the coun­try’s affairs the PNP has changed the entire eco­nom­ic, struc­tur­al and moral par­a­digm of the Island and its not for the bet­ter. People no longer aspire to self employ­ment and own­ing their own busi­ness­es as much. Being sup­port­ed by Government and ben­e­fit­ing from some regres­sive gov­ern­ment pol­i­cy are what Jamaicans aspire to nowa­days and these are they who want to walk the straight and narrow.
The once vibrant pri­vate sec­tor which ruled in the 60’s has long been replaced by a small cadre of lack­eys loy­al to the PNP but which is not pro­vid­ing any real jobs for Jamaicans.

Most of the nation’s fac­to­ries and its man­u­fac­tur­ing sec­tor has long moved to Trinidad and oth­er CARICOM states, many sim­ply closed their doors . Years and years of back­ward social­ist based poli­cies have made it impos­si­ble for com­pa­nies to oper­ate in Jamaica’s cor­rupt, and hos­tile busi­ness envi­ron­ment. Jamaican gov­ern­ment bureau­cra­cy changes on whims, pol­i­cy posi­tions are not laws they change on the whim of min­is­ters of Government rather that be root­ed in law.
In that envi­ron­ment it is no won­der there is a whole gen­er­a­tion which has no real con­cept how a mar­ket econ­o­my works out­side the con­fus­ing, con­vo­lut­ed sys­tem they see play out each day.
The old dinosaurs are quite com­fort­able being decep­tive, after all many of them have grown fat on false indoc­tri­na­tion and manip­u­la­tion of the youth .
In that envi­ron­ment it will be dif­fi­cult to con­vince them that this new path of account­abil­i­ty and tax cuts is the cor­rect path.
For too long they have sucked the sour milk they can­not appre­ci­ate the taste of fresh milk and to some degree it may give many of them the runs. Look for those who grew fat suck­ing the teats for the sour milk to keep com­ing out claim­ing that fresh milk is bad for you.
It’s your call , you vot­ed for fresh milk , now sup­port your gov­ern­ment. Yes hold the Government account­able but do not allow them to con­vince you to go back.