Latest update April 18th, 2024 12:59 AM
May 17, 2021 Letters
Dear Editor,
Thanks to the media and the mostly underground Christopher Ram, Guyanese have a new conundrum with which to grapple. It is best presented to the public as christened: “excess of timelines for flaring events.” Even I have to pause, and thread gingerly around this Kissingerian construction, this Machiavellian monstrosity that could lay waste to any interpretation. This is reminiscent of Guyana’s constitutional morass that, if permissible, it would have limped its way to the august CCJ for some final sagacious adjudication. Whatever that concoction means, this is where all of my positions terminate: it is of the tangled webs that we weave, when we practice to deceive.
It has been deception upon deception, and as the erudite and patiently probing accountant cum attorney-once omnipresent, now a pale faded shadow of himself, revealed: that insult and embarrassment of a US$30 fine per ton is ultimately paid by Guyanese. Because I feel politically charitable today, I will volunteer something publicly. That stupidity of a fine, so meaningless as to be useless and pointless, is so dirt cheap, that I am thinking of paying for it. But because I think so poorly of the ethics of the PPP government and crooked PPP leaders, disbursement would be to some private charitable organisation. That way government and leaders can’t get their hands on the money, even on something so tiny; it is my conclusion of how low they would sink.
To levy a fine of US$30 (GY$6000) per tonne on Exxon for whatever that phrase quoted above means and whenever it applies (if it ever does) to a corporate powerhouse like Exxon has to be the source of unending derisive laughter in the corridors of Exxon. A double shot of Johnnie Walker Blue costs more on the expense accounts of its top executives, who must be even more convulsed with laughter at how incurably mentally defective (worse than lazy) Guyanese are. Unfortunately, that means all of us, including yours truly. Whether I like it or not, I find myself lumped with all these political halfwits, and the national parade of dimwits. It is the price paid for yearning to be here. I call it diaspora decompression.
US$30 a tonne conveys that we have no shame, not a speck of pride or self-respect left. There is no deterrent present there; it definitely lacks any element of what could be considered punitive. It is more rehabilitative and conducive to a continuation of reckless ways by a feckless American corporate superpower, and the lowlife Third World political people that it gets to go down on their knees and clean up after them. For there it was: a Guyanese leader, without a care as to how utterly impotent and unconcerned he comes across, going before the public and announcing that measly US$30 per ton fine. It is an invitation to flare more. Perhaps, that is what that “timelines” business is about; how to flare at will, while the mudheads try to find their feet.
Sincerely,
GHK Lall
JAGDEO ADDING MORE DANGER TO GUYANA AND THE REGION
Apr 18, 2024
SportsMax – West Indies captain Hayley Matthews has been named Wisden’s leading Twenty20 Cricketer for 2023, as she topped all and sundry, including her male counterparts. Alan Gardner looks...Kaieteur News – Compliments of the Ministry of Education, our secondary school children are being treated to a stage... more
By Sir Ronald Sanders Waterfalls Magazine – On April 10, the Permanent Council of the Organization of American States... more
Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: [email protected] / [email protected]