Comment history

JohnDoe says...

Mudda and Alternate Reality how does it feel to ask yourself questions and then answer them or make statements to yourself and then respond to them? There is a name for people that do that you know.

JohnDoe says...

Mr. Albury give me a break and put on your big boy pants and stop crying and start acting like a darn competent businessman. Your business model is simply obsolete. All cars imported into this country pay the same taxes that you pay. I obviously do not get it, that people just cannot afford your overpriced and very expensive cars that only last two years before a major repair is necessary even before you finish paying the interest on your loan.

JohnDoe says...

Never quite understood the business strategy behind the PowerSecure management contract, however, sad to say we are right back where we started with the original business model that has been failing for years. It does not help that the BPL Board, and most of the other Boards appointed by the FNM, are some of the weakest Boards in modern Bahamian business
history. The BPL business issues are legion, but the central issues are its financial inflexibility due to its high debt levels, obsolete generation and transmission capability, capacity and infrastructure and management incompetence. In short without an injection of significant capital they are caught in a vicious cycle of trying to maintain their obsolete generation capacity to meet an ever increasing energy demand.

On Losing expat staff helps BPL save $3m

Posted 1 November 2017, 11:32 p.m. Suggest removal

JohnDoe says...

It ain't that serious to just just make Sh-- up like that ma boy. Sad!

On Hundreds flock to Island Luck job fair

Posted 29 October 2017, 6:18 p.m. Suggest removal

JohnDoe says...

Am not advocating anything about who should rule us, I am just stating empirical facts that you too can read in the Central Bank of the Bahamas quarterly Digest. Why are you guys so ashamed of the fact that you have accumulated so much wealth off of the backs of average Bahamians? Own it because the facts do not lie. I am not calling anyone nasty names or calling anyone out by race I am just stating the facts which obviously are inconvenient to you/Mudda paid propaganda. You may choose your opinion but not your own facts.

Homeboy, all I want is for us to turn this country around and create some jobs for these young children when they come out of school because if we don't God help us. The nonsense and silly talk from you/Mudda is nothing but a distraction that I feel must not be left unchallenged.

On Hundreds flock to Island Luck job fair

Posted 29 October 2017, 5:55 p.m. Suggest removal

JohnDoe says...

I respect that and in that respect our interests are aligned. Why more Bahamians cannot see that we are about to drive off a cliff of no return is beyond me. We have about a couple of years to turn this thing around or our way of life as we know it will be lost forever.

On Hundreds flock to Island Luck job fair

Posted 29 October 2017, 5:45 p.m. Suggest removal

JohnDoe says...

You guys, and by that I mean Mudda and his alter egos, are really full of it. You would have us believe that the web shops are the source of all of our problems when before the webshops 1% of the population owned more than 90% of the wealth in this country. That is the definition of economic slavery and it did not start with webshops. How long do you think it took for a certain class of our society representing less than 1% to own 90% of the wealth in this country. This inequality has been around for over 100 years and growing and you/Mudda apparently ain't gat no problem with that. Well, I have a problem with what the 1% is doing with that wealth. I voted no in the referendum but the difference that I can see between the webshops profits and that 1% is that one group is re-investing in our country and the other group is sending their money to Switzerland. For all the nonsense talk about webshops taking money out of the economy the real money that has been taken out of the economy is much of that 90%.

Stop the silly talk and if your are serious let's talk about the real problems, of which gaming may be one, and the real solutions so that we as a society can create good jobs for our children after they graduate from school.

On Hundreds flock to Island Luck job fair

Posted 29 October 2017, 8:47 a.m. Suggest removal

JohnDoe says...

Agreed Banker. He is a paid special interest propagandist interested in perpetuating the historical status quo. The multiple accounts is his attempt to lend credibility to his posts. He is posting from a couple accounts in this same thread.

On Sarkis raises new Baha Mar questions

Posted 28 October 2017, 8:57 p.m. Suggest removal

JohnDoe says...

You forgot to mention that it would also mean that judges in both the Bahamas and the USA are corrupt and that the Bahamian government had the capacity to pre-determine and influence the results of the US courts.

On Sarkis raises new Baha Mar questions

Posted 28 October 2017, 8:47 p.m. Suggest removal

JohnDoe says...

For paid propagandist like yourself I suspect it is your job to continually call these men criminals without any evidence to support your claim. And even if there was evidence it is not for you to be their judge and jury. The last I checked the industry they operate in was operating pursuant to the laws of the Bahamas. We may reasonably disagree with them as individuals, with their activities, and the even the law they operate under but it is still the law that governs all of us and it is absolutely not criminal. As citizens in a civil democratic society we cannot cherry pick which laws to follow and which laws not to follow because in that cherry picking we then sow the seeds for anarchy which, in fact, makes your comments above an abomination to both civil discourse and democracy.

We must lift the level of discourse and debate in this country if we are ever going to solve the serious national problems facing us. Stop the darn silly talk. There are thousands of young people coming out of school every year and we as a society have no jobs for them. After four to five years out of school and no jobs what does society expect these young people to do?

On Hundreds flock to Island Luck job fair

Posted 28 October 2017, 8:18 p.m. Suggest removal