If the headlines in the newspapers over the past week are to be trusted, the country seems to be back on track. Back in Trini mode. Whew! For a couple of weeks in 2010, I thought we were serious about becoming First World. Imagine life in a First World Trinidad? No bacchanal. No fetes. Nobody to maco or mamaguy? People serious on the radio, discussing the life cycle of the West Indian manatee or the effect of air pollution on African Sea Coconut sales or the relationship between wining and the lifestyle of the French Creole? Even Benny is coming back so you know money is beginning to flow. Questions abound. Is he coming to design for the People's Band or the Catholic Band?
Now that the 31-year-old junior technician has resigned, after finding out that she does not have enough degrees and needs more input from the Ministry of Education, is Benny coming to head the SIA or the SSA or the ASS or another one of our secret service agencies? We must have more secret service agencies per capita than any other country in the world.
Will the project manager be accorded a front row seat so that he can publicly ask Benny, "Am I still a foolish man?" Or will he appear on stage with the master and together with his successor bark for Benny? After the National Security adviser found the once elusive piano hidden under some layers of cloth (is this what he is paid to do?), somebody found a cougar in somebody's home in Valsayn. A former Minister of Education, he of "paradigm" fame, stepped up to explain that there was nothing wrong with that, as if cougars liming in Valsayn gardens was no big thing. Perhaps he mistook the type of cougar being described. The mayor of Port-of-Spain continued his efforts to clean up the city by informing drivers of illegally parked cars that their cars would be wrecked and hauled away to a "secret place" somewhere in Trinidad. Sceptics immediately asked what hotel in central he was referring to and if the attendants spoke Spanish.
Cars seemed to be in the news. The plan to legalise "PH" taxis, a typical Trickidadian screw-up if there was ever one-you attempt to solve the problem of no transportation by bypassing the obvious solution (increase transpor- tation) and make up a new problem (assist people breaking the law)-hit another roadblock when it was determined that many insurance companies might not want to insure them. No doubt someone in the Government would start his own insurance agency.
A politician from Jamaica advised local politicians to develop healthy relationships with the media, saying they needed to be "comfortable in bed." Except for Andy Johnson, who is looking distinctly uncomfortable with each passing month, the PP should feel comfortable with this.
Another group calling itself "Concerned National Citizens" marched against "Mama Kamla and Papa Dooks." They were really serious. Newspapers reported that they marched in the "pouring rain." Wow! The only other time Trinis do that is on J'Ouvert morning. The Concerned National Citizens turned out to be another group of investors in Clico who had lost money in a high-risk money market scheme. Talk about boldface! You make a private investment and when you lose out, you want the taxpayers to pay you back everything you lost and you calling it a national concern?
Some citizens! Some concern!
At the end of the week that was, all and sundry seemed to be having a good time feting. The "White Friday" Natuc protest looked nice. Everyone wore white and after the march, as it was a Friday, everyone went home. Have you ever seen a protest march on any other day but a Friday? After "White Friday" up north, we had something called "Sexy in Black" down south but that was another fete.
There's no racism in Trini protests or fetes. Talking about fetes, the new PM was set to attend her second of the week by making a "guest appearance" at the UNC Dollar Fete, I thought "guest appearance" was for singers and dancers but times, they're a-changing.
Security for the WASA fete was said to be similar to that for the Fifth Summit of the Americas and CHOGM, those well-known events that put T&T high up onto the international scene.
Concern however was raised by some policemen that routine police work, like preventing kidnappings or the breaking of traffic lights, or solving murders would suffer. Not a problem responded a couple of high-profile ministers, "we will be there!" Finally, as if to show the respect we have for health and life, there came the expected call for resumption of hangings by various religious leaders and the Ministry of Trade and Industry decided to allow the importation of those paradigms of good health, frozen fries and refined sugar, free entry into T&T. The minister is "working," said the head of the Supermarkets Association.
Thank God somebody is.