Scientific studies have concluded that female sexuality is much more fluid and flexible than male sexuality. With the advent of gay marriage, the number of "bisexual" women has increased exponentially, while the male rate has remained steady. Black women, in particular, have seen a huge increase in lesbian encounters, as they are said to be safe from STDs and do not cause pregnancy. Already, lesbianism is rampant in The Bahamas and entire Caribbean. Male homosexuality is merely a red herring. While there is a fixed number of homosexual men, it is concerning that NGOs, such as Rights Bahamas, are using propaganda to increase the number of lesbians. There will in the near future be a tipping point, when more women are lesbian than heterosexual. Once lesbianism becomes the majority and norm (within twenty years by my estimate), this will have a drastic impact on the fabric of human society and the temperament of men. Can you imagine if men cannot find females to marry, because all the females are marrying each other? The title of the article is, "Gay, Straight - Just Why Does It Matter?" This is why it matters!!!!
Twenty years from now the real losers in the gay marriage saga will be men. It is likely that in the future most women will marry each other and leave men out of the equation altogether. So, ultimately, it will matter very, very much to men.
The fourty years of Independence has been one big, lengthy blackeye. Between fourty years of stealing and incompetence, OECD blacklisting and hurricane Dorian, we honestly don't have anymore eyes to blacken.
What rights do any of us have? Who wants to get married, when the laws make sure you will lose your money in a divorce. There are almost no benefits to being Bahamian anymore. The US won't even let us immigrate in an emergency. It seems like Rights Bahamas wants greater benefits and rights for its represented minorities than average Bahamians have and that's the real issue.
Why is it considered xenophobic to remove illegal shantytowns? Xenophobia is defined as dislike of or prejudice against people from other countries. So, their logic is that because Haitian culture promotes illegal construction of shantytowns, our laws are hateful of Haitians. What if it was Haitian culture to sacrifice people. Would stopping this practice also be called xenophobic? We need to find a middle, common ground with Rights Bahamas. We must at least both agree that shantytowns are wrong and not desirous, healthy or legal. From this middle ground we can start a discourse.
So how would you suggest The Bahamas deal with its cratering economy due to Hurricane Dorian and future global warming threat? Honestly, I respect your opinion greatly.
The question is: will we ever do it ourselves? What if another CAT 5 hurricane hits New Providence next year? I have been the biggest critic of WTO. I believe we must get our house in order first. But what if we never get our house in order? The Bahamas needs a new leverage strategy moving forward. Abaco was a yachters' paradise, and Baker's Bay was creaming it. Then, hurricane Dorian hit and all of that is gone. Where do we turn from here? If only Minnis would pass the Freedom of Information Act and campaign finance reform, which he for some reason refuses to do, I would be willing to give WTO a chance. WTO is not terrible, if you have the right expertise and you negotiate awesome accession terms. I do not have faith in the negotiation skills of The Bahamas' negotiation team, but if I did, then I would definitely be interested in considering WTO. No more propoganda please: both the pros and cons would need to be freely discussed and a comparitive study on its impact on other undeveloped, small economies. The Bahamas needs something big!!! It has too much debt to do nothing, or it will default on its loans. If we had no debt, as in our nation's past, hurricanes posed little problem, and we relied on our British compatriots. Now we are 8 billion in debt and an independent country, we must do something to energize our economy.
The honest truth is this country is in "free fall." From the loss of offshore financial services due to OECD blacklisting, which demolished our international banking prestige to the recent Hurricane Dorian, which wiped out our high rollers' yaucht haven in Abaco. We have lost a huge amount of reputational capital in a very short time. There is no doubt that something must be done to deliver The Bahamas from sinking into failure. What that something is, I do not know. Would the WTO help? Anything is worth a shot. We are looking at failed state status folks. This hurricane did far more damage to The Bahamas' fiscal sustainability than we even realize at this time. The Image of the Bahamas has changed in the international imagination from paradise to horror show. The status quo is no longer acceptable, or we are headed to downgrade after downgrade, recession after recession.
My question is can the world deport the United Nations? Please. The UN is just a puppet of China and Globalists to infiltrate and grease failed third world countries by making their corrupt leaders feel important.
We should not joint WTO until we can ensure it will not be used by China to control our nation, as with African nations. Further, we must get our house in order first and pass Freedom of Information Act and Campaign Finance Reform to ensure there is proper transparency and it does not subvert our democracy further by increasing corruption.
BahamaPundit says...
Scientific studies have concluded that female sexuality is much more fluid and flexible than male sexuality. With the advent of gay marriage, the number of "bisexual" women has increased exponentially, while the male rate has remained steady. Black women, in particular, have seen a huge increase in lesbian encounters, as they are said to be safe from STDs and do not cause pregnancy. Already, lesbianism is rampant in The Bahamas and entire Caribbean. Male homosexuality is merely a red herring. While there is a fixed number of homosexual men, it is concerning that NGOs, such as Rights Bahamas, are using propaganda to increase the number of lesbians. There will in the near future be a tipping point, when more women are lesbian than heterosexual. Once lesbianism becomes the majority and norm (within twenty years by my estimate), this will have a drastic impact on the fabric of human society and the temperament of men. Can you imagine if men cannot find females to marry, because all the females are marrying each other? The title of the article is, "Gay, Straight - Just Why Does It Matter?" This is why it matters!!!!
On Gay, straight - just why does it matter?
Posted 25 October 2019, 7:21 p.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
Twenty years from now the real losers in the gay marriage saga will be men. It is likely that in the future most women will marry each other and leave men out of the equation altogether. So, ultimately, it will matter very, very much to men.
On Gay, straight - just why does it matter?
Posted 25 October 2019, 1:29 p.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
The fourty years of Independence has been one big, lengthy blackeye. Between fourty years of stealing and incompetence, OECD blacklisting and hurricane Dorian, we honestly don't have anymore eyes to blacken.
On We may get a black eye over immigration, warns bishop
Posted 24 October 2019, 2:08 p.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
What rights do any of us have? Who wants to get married, when the laws make sure you will lose your money in a divorce. There are almost no benefits to being Bahamian anymore. The US won't even let us immigrate in an emergency. It seems like Rights Bahamas wants greater benefits and rights for its represented minorities than average Bahamians have and that's the real issue.
On ‘WE’LL STAND UP TO BIGOTS AND BULLIES’: Rights Bahamas warns churches on anti-gay stance
Posted 24 October 2019, 12:10 p.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
Why is it considered xenophobic to remove illegal shantytowns? Xenophobia is defined as dislike of or prejudice against people from other countries. So, their logic is that because Haitian culture promotes illegal construction of shantytowns, our laws are hateful of Haitians. What if it was Haitian culture to sacrifice people. Would stopping this practice also be called xenophobic? We need to find a middle, common ground with Rights Bahamas. We must at least both agree that shantytowns are wrong and not desirous, healthy or legal. From this middle ground we can start a discourse.
On DEMOLITION BAN ‘MUST BE LIFTED’ – Minnis orders AG: Get shanty town order thrown out
Posted 23 October 2019, 11:28 a.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
So how would you suggest The Bahamas deal with its cratering economy due to Hurricane Dorian and future global warming threat? Honestly, I respect your opinion greatly.
On WTO delay: We must get on with it
Posted 22 October 2019, 7:37 p.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
The question is: will we ever do it ourselves? What if another CAT 5 hurricane hits New Providence next year? I have been the biggest critic of WTO. I believe we must get our house in order first. But what if we never get our house in order? The Bahamas needs a new leverage strategy moving forward. Abaco was a yachters' paradise, and Baker's Bay was creaming it. Then, hurricane Dorian hit and all of that is gone. Where do we turn from here? If only Minnis would pass the Freedom of Information Act and campaign finance reform, which he for some reason refuses to do, I would be willing to give WTO a chance. WTO is not terrible, if you have the right expertise and you negotiate awesome accession terms. I do not have faith in the negotiation skills of The Bahamas' negotiation team, but if I did, then I would definitely be interested in considering WTO. No more propoganda please: both the pros and cons would need to be freely discussed and a comparitive study on its impact on other undeveloped, small economies. The Bahamas needs something big!!! It has too much debt to do nothing, or it will default on its loans. If we had no debt, as in our nation's past, hurricanes posed little problem, and we relied on our British compatriots. Now we are 8 billion in debt and an independent country, we must do something to energize our economy.
On WTO delay: We must get on with it
Posted 22 October 2019, 7:12 a.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
The honest truth is this country is in "free fall." From the loss of offshore financial services due to OECD blacklisting, which demolished our international banking prestige to the recent Hurricane Dorian, which wiped out our high rollers' yaucht haven in Abaco. We have lost a huge amount of reputational capital in a very short time. There is no doubt that something must be done to deliver The Bahamas from sinking into failure. What that something is, I do not know. Would the WTO help? Anything is worth a shot. We are looking at failed state status folks. This hurricane did far more damage to The Bahamas' fiscal sustainability than we even realize at this time. The Image of the Bahamas has changed in the international imagination from paradise to horror show. The status quo is no longer acceptable, or we are headed to downgrade after downgrade, recession after recession.
On WTO delay: We must get on with it
Posted 21 October 2019, 10:54 p.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
My question is can the world deport the United Nations? Please. The UN is just a puppet of China and Globalists to infiltrate and grease failed third world countries by making their corrupt leaders feel important.
On NO BACKING DOWN ON DEPORTATIONS: Govt rejects UN’s concern over new migrant expulsions
Posted 21 October 2019, 11:06 a.m. Suggest removal
BahamaPundit says...
We should not joint WTO until we can ensure it will not be used by China to control our nation, as with African nations. Further, we must get our house in order first and pass Freedom of Information Act and Campaign Finance Reform to ensure there is proper transparency and it does not subvert our democracy further by increasing corruption.
On 'Music to my ears' WTO 95% unlikely
Posted 18 October 2019, 2:41 p.m. Suggest removal