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Opinion: Caribbean Hubris

The classic example of hubris can be found in the Greek tale of Icarus who escaped his island prison with wings of wax and feathers that melted when he came too close to the sun causing him to fall to his death. That in a nutshell is what is happening to our political leadership as they pirouette from disaster to disaster, believing all the while that the voters and their party members are blind to their errors.

A comedy until it becomes tragic.

Caribbean Justice

elected leadersIn the world of today the sun confronted by Icarus would be in the case of Trinidad, the president of the United States. Instead of a quick rush to the golden orb they are having a protracted journey measured in years until the next American election when they and their citizens will become the confirmed outcasts of the Caribbean. They may be forced to leave CARICOM and they will no longer be the ultimate seat of Caribbean justice. Their students will have to wonder the corners of the earth to seek a place in what Americans call college having all been rebuffed by the University of the West Indies.

No more contact with the inner world. The tropical Russians.

There are other poor versions of Icarus in many islands.

In Jamaica, the prime minister who has impeded and delayed an integrity investigation, now asks for a status report when he is intimately knowledgeable of the state of that enquiry.

Butter would not melt in his mouth.

One of his prominent ministers has breached procurement rules in a very expensive acquisition and he has promised he would do the same again. Their Auditor General must feel like Peter with his finger in the dyke.

Even the small Cayman Islands has a leader who is blinded by the onset of a global minimum tax agreement that threatens to destroy their financial industry that supports a gargantuan budget. No plans or even faux press reports, just silence until the debacle.

The people of the Caribbean need not debate this common characteristic among their elected leaders. Those leaders depend on the support of their party members. Those members of parliament rely on the people for election. Unless the people speak at the ballot box or the constituency elected are infected by an outbreak of ethical behavior, then the ultimate responsibility lays with people, business leaders, civic society groups and trade unions.

Silence of the lambs.

 

Peter Polack

Peter Polack is a former criminal lawyer in the Cayman Islands for several decades. His books are The Last Hot Battle of the Cold War: South Africa vs. Cuba in the Angolan Civil War (2013), Jamaica, The Land of Film (2017) and Guerrilla Warfare: Kings of Revolution (2019). He was a contributor to Encyclopedia of Warfare (2013). His latest book is a compendium of Russian espionage activities with almost five hundred Soviet spies expelled from nearly 100 countries worldwide 1940-88.

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