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Editorial

The Jamaican spirit can get us through this New Year

Sunday, January 01, 2012



The glorious uncertainty of what will happen in a New Year is perhaps what makes life interesting and exciting. We never quite know where the road will turn. But from the compass provided by the past year, there are some things we can be very certain of.

Every thinking Jamaican knows that 2012 will most definitely be a tough year economically. There is so little wiggle room that even with the utmost creativity and the most optimistic projections, growth will be anaemic.

The debt disaster in which we have found ourselves will make it virtually impossible to lift our people out of the perennial poverty which is the lot of too many.

The promised renegotiation of the agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), if we are successful, will bring only minimal relief.

And yet, the really great thing about a New Year and its uncertainties is that it is a time of hope that offers opportunity for renewal and making new starts.

There will be economic hard times, but if the world economic recession begins to taper off, we might see big improvements in tourism and foreign direct investment that could bring jobs. This is all within the realm of possibility, given some favourable, if tentative, signs in the United States economy.

Moreover, if the promised JEEP (Jamaica Emergency Employment Programme) comes to fruition — it depends on renegotiation with the Chinese — we could see some relief going to the large number of jobless Jamaicans, some of whom have not known what it is to work in many years. This is also possible because the Chinese have proven to be our great friends.

But whatever assistance will come to us from outside sources, our fate lies in our hands, and it is what we do as Jamaicans that will take us to the mountain top.

Thankfully, it is here that we have our greatest advantage for bringing value added to our development thrust. Our indomitable Jamaican spirit, which has metamorphosed into an internationally recognised and respected brand, is what will make 2012 a truly special year for us.

Ours is a culture of surviving even the greatest odds. Survival is written into our DNA. The Jamaican people -- audacious, creative, courageous, aggressive yet generous -- have excelled everywhere they have called home.

The real challenge is to make that brand work for us in our island nation the way it has worked for others. We can think of two events that right now should engage our minds in a powerful way.

First, the celebrations marking our 50th anniversary as an Independent nation will provide us a unique opportunity to show off all that we are worth to the world, while laying the basis for the Jamaica we want to create for the next 50 years.

Second, the 2012 Olympics in London, England, is of great significance beyond athletics. It is perhaps more than just coincidence that our 50th year of Independence is unfolding while the Olympics is taking place in the very country from whose 'ownership' we have emerged. What a confluence of circumstances! This summer we should aspire and plan to bring colonialism in reverse to the Mother Country, through mighty collaboration with the Jamaican diaspora there.

It might be no accident of fate that the People's National Party (PNP), which fought so hard for our Independence, is being given the reins of leadership as we start the next 50 years of our Independence.

Let us make the most of it and give the world something it has never seen before.



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COMMENTS (3)

Ever Dunk
1/7/2012
The 50th ann celebrations in my mind is nothing but symbolism, by the 51first year we would have gone back to who we are which is a polorized nation who ideolize our politicians, when one party is in power the rest of us sit idly by and pray that everything the incumbent does fail. We have been dwarfted by our politics, we are badminded hypocritical people. Until we have come to these realizations we are lost and by our 100 year anniversary your grandson would be writing the same thing.
Chipmunk L.
1/2/2012
It is important to hold the government accountable from day one of the Administration. Accountability should be about jobs, reduction of criminal behavior, improvement in Education and medical treatment.
One thing that is of greater importance should be the reduction of sales to outside entities of our National resources. If other Island governments can refrain from selling out , so can we! We cannot expect to be resourceful if we sell off our resources! Time to wake up Jamaica!
Paul Gentles
1/1/2012
Destiny is in the hands of the people. Stand up for accountability , this means:
1) changes to the constitution - remove the judiciary from direct political control.
2) MNS and Police commisioners should have mandates - failure to achieve desired targets should see them walking. This action would also lead to a "cleaner" force.
3) Cabinet mins should have some grasp of their portfolios or these posts go to private individuals with relevant expertise.
4) All need to work as one.

Designating Mandeville a university town makes sense

  2 comments

 

A tough balancing act

  5 comments

 

Time to shift from austerity to growth strategy

  4 comments

 

Adopt the Grace Foods template

  0 comments

 

Heed Bishop Gregory's advice

  3 comments

 

Now you're talking, Mr Christie!

  7 comments

 

Gov't must use tax policy, fiscal expenditure to reduce income inequality

  0 comments

 

JPS’s first task is rebuilding trust

  0 comments

 

Complete the circle of Independence

  10 comments

 

Carib should take damaging rum subsidies to WTO

  0 comments

 

Pressure in an Olympic year

  0 comments

 

Nice move to encourage Jamaicans to vacation at home

  2 comments

 

More tax raids, yes, but more finesse too, TAJ!

  3 comments

 

What would we do without PetroCaribe?

  1 comments

 

Why Monsieur Sarkozy became a one-term president

  2 comments

 

Are these the leaders of tomorrow?

  9 comments

 

Politics of appointing and recalling our diplomats

  3 comments

 

Look what we have come to!

  3 comments

 

Bloodied, but unbowed - the splendid example of Mr Myers

  0 comments

 

Just so we don't wash our dirty linen in public

  7 comments

 

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