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  Damian Marley's Video - Blessing or a... (Page 3)

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Author Topic:   Damian Marley's Video - Blessing or a...
dirty dan 28
Junior Member
posted 09-21-2005 09:39 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for dirty dan 28     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
In the song, he says "funnyman a get dropped like a bad habit" this is in a version that i downloaded, but in the radio version and even on the explicit version of the cd the word "funnyman" is edited out. I live in the US and have no idea what it means so could you tell me. Also i think that it is good that the single and video is getting so much play here because it will make people aware of the harsh conditions that many jamiacans are experiencing and maybe push them to help out somehow.

[This message has been edited by dirty dan 28 (edited 09-21-2005).]

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TheDread
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posted 09-22-2005 01:34 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for TheDread     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Shatta_Cleve:
deh a "Inglewood" boss, close to the race track and the airport.

Wah you deh near my ends?

respect


I rest out in Calabasas, but I run through dem parts at least once a week.

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Chalwa
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posted 09-22-2005 02:18 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Chalwa     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
"Funny man" is certain circles mean gay man. De record company just mekkin' sure seh dat airplay won't be affected.

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tynee
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posted 09-24-2005 07:01 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for tynee     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
dis song is a tuuune!da video is jus showin da ral side of JA not da fake 1!how ppl can say dat deres a bad side and a gd side 2 it is rong, coz in all fairness da HOLE of JA is beautiful!

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brush
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posted 10-02-2005 08:32 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for brush     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Ian Boyne, Contributor

DAMIAN MARLEY'S single, Welcome to Jamrock, is perhaps the most lyrically and rhythmically rich and poignant single since Capleton's Tour some years ago. It is not just a song. It is a phenomenon.

'Jr. Gong' is the Marley who is set to have the biggest impact in Jamaica and across the world, and he is the most hard-core cultural heir of Bob Marley. There is something distinctive, something ineffable, something magical about Damian Marley that aficionados of roots rock reggae can attest to. His genius and appeal were already evident in the album Half Way Tree. This young man is definitely Grammy quality. His copping the award was not just a fluke. Bob Marley has, indeed, been reincarnated.

With over 86,000 copies sold in its first week of release, his new album has smashed all the sales records of every reggae artiste.

CONTROVERSY

Welcome to Jamrock has sparked controversy in some circles because it conflicts crudely and disconcertingly with the sanitised, Madison Avenue-packaged Paradise which has been marketed abroad, and it highlights a Jamaica which the Jamaican power elite would like to ignore. In Welcome to Jamrock, Damian Marley plays the classic role of the prophet who disturbs, afflicts and tortures the comforted with pictures and images not in concert with the vision of the ruling class. It lives up well to its genre of protest music, jolting the complacent who would soon forget the other Jamaica.

One incensed person, assumedly a Jamaican, does a good job of representing those in denial about the realities of inner-city Jamaica, in one blog: "I was watching MTV yesterday with a group of international friends who came to visit. Damian Marley's Welcome to Jamrock was on. I was in shock and awe. What was this guy thinking? He chooses the dirtiest streets with garbage piling up on both sides, people living in cardboard boxes, shattered zinc homes, man eating out of garbage bins. Utterly disgusting to see the image this guy is broadcasting to the world."

It certainly would be utterly disgusting if you invite your (white?) friends over as a proud Jamaican only to see that other side of Jamaica that you are ashamed of projected on your flat screen television in the suburbs of the United States. But this is just the point of cultural prophets like Jr. Gong: They, like the young Jeremiah, burst on the scene to afflict the comforted and to taunt the mainstream with the ugly subterranean realities.

God knows Jamaica needed a Damian Marley. That he is part of a whole renaissance of consciousness, roots/rock reggae music is particularly delightful to people like me who have long stood against the backwardness, slackness/bling bling and gun talk lyrics of the dancehall. How refreshing to see a concert recently with only culturally conscious Rastafarians 'bunning fire' on Babylon's false values, its materialism and oppression of the poor and marginalised.

DISGUSTED WITH VIOLENCE

The work of people like Chuck Fenda, Bascom X, Warrior King, Gyptian, Turbulence, I-Wayne, Richie Spice, Fantan Mojah, Morgan Heritage, Junior Kelly, etc. is particularly welcome in an environment where the guns are barking and where HIV/AIDS is claiming many precious lives. This renaissance in the dancehall must be supported and applauded by all members of civil society who are disgusted with the growing violence and anarchy in the country, the lack of vision and the runaway selfishness and atomism which characterise the society.

Welcome to Jamrock, superbly video-directed by Ras Kassa, the toughest and finest in the business, should be sent to all the contenders for the leadership of the People's National Party. It is all well and good to talk about massive infrastructural developments, fast-lane highways which facilitate easy travel by those who have cars. It's well and good to talk about "the greatest Spanish invasion since Christopher Columbus" (not the best expression in our historical context!), in reference to investments in our tourist industry.

It is good and true to talk about record numbers of Jamaicans owning homes, driving cars, having piped water, electricity and cellphones. It is good and true to talk about declining infant mortality rates and improvements in maternal health. It is good, great and true to say ­ though it is counter-intuitive - that poverty rates have actually fallen, that significant achievements have been made in the social sector.

It is true that we have record foreign exchange amounts in the Net International Reserves, that our exchange rate has been largely stable and that interest rates are going down. Yes, the rating agencies are happy with us and so are the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and other representatives of global capital. It is not true, as the Opposition claims, that the economy is collapsing. That's pure propaganda and exploitation of ignorance. But, niether is it true that things are rosy for everyone. There are many people who are left behind in this process of neo-liberal capitalist development, and there are not enough voices lobbying for them.

The potent voices of the Left from the 1970s have been silent. Some have joined the PNP chorus, regaling us with happy anthems about the progress which is being made. But Junior Gong is here to crash the party and to bring discordance to the "Don't Stop the Progress" choir.

DIFFERENT IMAGES OF JA

We can choose to crucify him because his image of Jamrock is not that of the Jamaica Tourist Board. Yes, it is true, the footage in Welcome to Jamrock is not representative of all of Jamaica. There are the lovely, scenic and therapeutic images of Jamaica which the Prime Minister showed the Travel Channel producer. I am cool with that.

But just as the Jamaica on the Travel Channel is not all of Jamaica, and no one is accusing the Prime Minister of distortion, so is Junior Gong's portrayal of Jamaica no distortion either.

Truth, as the postmodernist philosophers would maintain, is perspectival and situated. There is no "view from nowhere", no neutral, Archimedean point. None of us speaks outside of a particular context. Where one sits, as one philosopher says, determines where one stands.

But I tell you that we ignore Damian Marley's Jamrock to our own peril. As the revolutionary-looking Gong says in this lyrical dynamite of a song: "Some bwoy nah notice, dem only come around like tourist." The politicians tour their constituencies, but do they represent the heart and soul of those inner-city constituencies? Damian Marley and many Jamaicans don't believe so. All dem dealing wid is some "bedtime stories... and don't know di real hardcore". But watch it, Prophet Marley warns: "When Trench Town man stop laugh and block off traffic. Then dem wheel and pop off and dem start clap it... Police come inna jeep and dem caan stop it." Jamaica, Jamaica!

This is consciousness lyrics at its best. It is an appeal to uptown and the power elite to take notice, to stop making the poor and inner-city youth invisible. I know we don't want to be reminded of the Jamaica Ras Kassa shows us on the Welcome to Jamrock video. We don't want to disturb our evening meal.

But, the youth who hails from both uptown and downtown - the Half Way Tree metaphor - yells: "To see di sufferation sick mi. Dem suit nuh fit me, to win election dem trick wi." While it is an exaggeration ­ poetic licence if you will ­ to say as the Gong does that, "They don't do nutten at all", the Gong is dramatising and using hyperbole to make his point. Hear the young prophet some more: "Come let's face it, a ghetto education's basic. And most a di yutes dem waste it and when dem waste it, then dem tek the guns replace it. Then dem don't stand a chance at all." What powerful lyrics!

ANOTHER GRAMMY WINNER

The progressive forces in this country have abdicated their responsibility to the poor and marginalised. Some of those now supposedly speaking on behalf of the poor are merely using the poor to come to power to further their own political ambitions. It is artistes like Damian Marley from whom we can expect the sincerity, honesty and deep empathy for the underclass.

Welcome to Jamrock is another Grammy winner. It deserves every accolade possible. It reveals the work of a young man who is on a mission, who is no mere minstrel or entertainer, hunting for "forwards". He is using the popular dancehall idiom and hard-core rhythm to drive home universal truths. Every Christian, every pastor, every religious and social activist should applaud this song. (We don't have to accept the Selassie theology to embrace the song's universal message of concern for the oppressed).

When the defenders of negative dancehall have sought to defend the indefensible by saying that the gun-lyrics deejays are merely "reflecting the reality of the ghetto when they sing about gun," I have replied that boasting about AK, M-16 and SLRs and talking about boring man skull is not the same as talking about the reality of the gun in protest music. Welcome to Jamrock is a perfect example of an artiste's talking about the gun and about ghetto realities without glorifying the gun or violence.

Incidentally, Vybz Kartel's Emergency is excellent and a first-class piece of protest music. Bounty Killer, Ninjaman, Kartel, Assassin, Kip Rich, Bling Dawg and the others have the ability to do serious protest songs, but because the UWI dancehall defenders have provided no guidance and have promoted "almshouse" by excusing the reprehensible in the dancehall, they continue in the folly of their ways.

Junior Gong has shown them the real potency of dancehall. And he is achieving an international commercial success with his hard-core sound that the gun hawks who are "king a yard" can never hope to have. Welcome to Jamrock is an anthem for the poor and oppressed, the invisible in the society, those left behind by globalisation and the neo-liberal, Washington Consensus policies. Bob Marley would be proud. Jah live!

Ian Boyne is a veteran journalist. You can send your comments to ianboyne1@yahoo.com or infocus@gleanerjm.com.

Source: Jamaica Gleaner


[This message has been edited by brush (edited 10-02-2005).]

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Technic
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posted 10-02-2005 08:50 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Technic     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Just goes to show how powerful and widespread this, thereggaeboyz.com, forum is.

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brush
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posted 10-02-2005 08:57 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for brush     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Just goes to show how powerful and widespread this, thereggaeboyz.com, forum is.

Technic


Yuh see it Technic. And yet still wi behave as if wi waan mass-up dis ting yah.

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YARDIE_B
Junior Member
posted 10-08-2005 01:11 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for YARDIE_B     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Sounds like my youth big mountain is a certified hater.1 a dem yankeefied fake jamaicans.how can you seh dem tings deh bout 1 a de most powerful messages to come outta jamaica in a while.no disrespect to cartel or bounty and dem,but we need more kalonjis and jr gongs to get people to see weh we a come from and weh we ago get to,Indian.

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Big Mountain
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posted 10-08-2005 08:16 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Big Mountain     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Some way along the line when you think this thread is all dead and a thing of the past, it just keep popping up like a bad habit...

This thread has attracted more first-time nay sayers (posters) than flies on crap.

For those of you who are having a problem with reading and comprehension, including Mr.Boyne, let me put it straight. THIS IS MY VIEW! MY OPINION! If you don't like it then go jump off a cliff!

I have no problem with what Mr. Gong wants to sing about or what he is preaching. After all, most people outside Jamaica don't even understand the lyrics of most Reggae songs anyway. Most just dance to the beat. My problem is with the video...I repeat the VIDEO.

If you guys think being a true Jamaican is watching filth on your TV coming from your Island and feeling proud about it is being patriotic, is the philosophy of a sick mind. Enjoying the sight of your countrymen living in squalor makes you a proud Jamaican is demented!

Someone mentioned that this video will show the world the other side of Jamaica that tourist don't see. What benefit will this bring to Jamaica? International aide? I am still waiting for the benefits and proceeds of this video to trickle down to the people in the video.

The main reason why Jamaica is so crime ridded with cold blooded killers is because of people like you fools who glorify bad men or shottas and provide them with all the support and attention they need. Hell! Why don't we just make other videos of children being shot to death in their sleep or being burned alive and we just grab a cup of coffee lay back and watch it on tv?

This song may have a strong message, to me it is directed at the wrong recipients. Do you think the corrupt politicians in Jamaica will listen to this song and make changes? Do you think they are blind to the situation and need a video to show them?

There is not a video in this world that can change the situation in Jamaica. First of all, Jamaicans have to emancipate themselves from mental slavery (Gong father humself). They have to free their minds of glorifying filth, supporting corrupt politicians, worshipping dons and give the security forces their full support in apprehending dangerous criminals.

Yet, we want to show the world, the mess we created and supported. The other side of Jamaica is the mess we created - not the politicians! We are the ones who gave them the power to impose this on us.

And before you fools respond with your crap...1. take a class in reading and comprehension 101 2. read my response carefully 3. then come back and post.

Including you Mr. Boyne.

[This message has been edited by Big Mountain (edited 10-08-2005).]

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CHISEL
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posted 10-08-2005 08:33 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for CHISEL     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Big Mountain:
Some way along the line when you think this thread is all dead and a thing of the past, it just keep popping up like a bad habit...

This thread has attracted more first-time nay sayers (posters) than flies on crap.

For those of you who are having a problem with reading and comprehension, including Mr.Boyne, let me put it straight. THIS IS MY VIEW! MY OPINION! If you don't like it then go jump off a cliff!

I have no problem with what Mr. Gong wants to sing about or what he is preaching. After all, most people outside Jamaica don't even understand the lyrics of most Reggae songs anyway. Most just dance to the beat. My problem is with the video...I repeat the VIDEO.

If you guys think being a true Jamaican is watching filth on your TV coming from your Island and feeling proud about it is being patriotic, is the philosophy of a sick mind. Enjoying the sight of your countrymen living in squalor makes you a proud Jamaican is demented!

Someone mentioned that this video will show the world the other side of Jamaica that tourist don't see. What benefit will this bring to Jamaica? International aide? I am still waiting for the benefits and proceeds of this video to trickle down to the people in the video.

The main reason why Jamaica is so crime ridded with cold blooded killers is because of people like you fools who glorify bad men or shottas and provide them with all the support and attention they need. Hell! Why don't we just make other videos of children being shot to death in their sleep or being burned alive and we just grab a cup of coffee lay back and watch it on tv?

This song may have a strong message, to me it is directed at the wrong recipients. Do you think the corrupt politicians in Jamaica will listen to this song and make changes? Do you think they are blind to the situation and need a video to show them?

There is not a video in this world that can change the situation in Jamaica. First of all, Jamaicans have to emancipate themselves from mental slavery (Gong father humself). They have to free their minds of glorifying filth, supporting corrupt politicians, worshipping dons and give the security forces their full support in apprehending dangerous criminals.

Yet, we want to show the world, the mess we created and supported. The other side of Jamaica is the mess we created - not the politicians! We are the ones who gave them the power to impose this on us.

And before you fools respond with your crap...1. take a class in reading and comprehension 101 2. read my response carefully 3. then come back and post.

Including you Mr. Boyne.

[This message has been edited by Big Mountain (edited 10-08-2005).]


That is your opinion big man and you are right, you do have a right to have an opinion. However, people like Boyne and myself who think that your opinion is horse$hit also have a right to express our opinion so let's just agree to disagree.

I liked the video because it reminds me of the Jamaican experience I remember, guys cleaning their Clarks outside etc. The video is a honest portrayal of the side of our country that is explored in the song so I don't see the big deal. Your "friends from foreign" don't need the protection. Take them to some areas in Mobile or New Orleans that I have visited and the images in that video will look like a picnic (and I am not talking about hurricane damage...my visit was in 1998).

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CHISEL
Member
posted 10-08-2005 08:40 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for CHISEL     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Big Mountain:

There is not a video in this world that can change the situation in Jamaica.

[This message has been edited by Big Mountain (edited 10-08-2005).]


Those are your words! Yet you are calling us fools for not having a problem with the video. I thought the video would cause tourists to stop coming and aid to stop flowing into our coffers from mother America. Last time I checked Jamaica wasn't a recipient of too much aid from uncle sam and if your statement is correct and no video can change anything, why are you having a fit?

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Big Mountain
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posted 10-08-2005 08:49 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Big Mountain     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Big Mountain:
And before you fools respond with your crap...1. take a class in reading and comprehension 101 2. read my response carefully 3. then come back and post.

Including you Mr. Boyne.

[This message has been edited by Big Mountain (edited 10-08-2005).]


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pressafoot
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posted 10-08-2005 08:51 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for pressafoot     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Outsiders are well aware of the underside of Ja.

The tourism thing is finished! Slow death.

They know. That is why without the all-inclusive there'd be no tourism to speak of.

Time they start investing in the sporting infratstructure.

There is very good money to be made in football. It's just that the people who control the purse strings are only interested in themselves and cronies and not Ja in the long run.

Sad to see what we have become.

After they merge police and soldiers(single point of corruption) the next step to Haitization, will be foreign troops.

Education is key.

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CHISEL
Member
posted 10-08-2005 09:10 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for CHISEL     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Big Mountain:

I am going to let this one rest. Old people seh u nuffi argue wid fools because people from a distance can't tell who is who.

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Big Mountain
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posted 10-08-2005 09:17 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Big Mountain     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote

[This message has been edited by Big Mountain (edited 10-08-2005).]

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Big Mountain
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posted 10-08-2005 09:24 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Big Mountain     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Big Mountain:
[B] Reading and comprehension is the key brethren. I am not sure where you are living and how in touch you are with Jamaica's economy. Tourism is dying in Jamaica. All the negative news and crime are making people stay away. Maybe this video images will save us amd improve things?

I won't waste my time in giving you the Jamaica Tourist Board stats. Maybe you can educate yourself. Just think about Air Jamaica and how it's losing millions every day.

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Big Mountain
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posted 10-08-2005 09:25 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Big Mountain     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
That's right! Don't argue with yourself...go to bed.

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Big Mountain
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posted 10-08-2005 09:26 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Big Mountain     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
That's right! Don't argue with yourself...go to bed!

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deceitful_dribbler
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posted 10-11-2005 09:33 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for deceitful_dribbler     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Tourism all over the world has dropped since 9/11. I guess you would rather a video showing man barefoot, smiling to tourist while running behind the tour bus. The video is the artists visual representation of the song and of the other side of jamaica.

P.S. By the way, what is the average age of the tourist that come to jamaica and do they watch MTV and BET?

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Shatta_Cleve
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posted 10-11-2005 01:22 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Shatta_Cleve     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Who gives a *&&^ck about an Industry with 70% leakage anyway? Full time we diversify our industries away from being that shuffling grinning black rasta for white people pleasure.

How about investing in our other industries for a damn change

respect

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CHISEL
Member
posted 10-11-2005 02:00 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for CHISEL     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Shatta_Cleve:
Who gives a *&&^ck about an Industry with 70% leakage anyway? Full time we diversify our industries away from being that shuffling grinning black rasta for white people pleasure.

How about investing in our other industries for a damn change

respect


Good point. How much of the tourism dollar trickles down to the average Jamaican? I was in Ocho Rios for a few nights recently and when I was on the streets at you couldn't tell that you were in a major tourist destination. None of the visitors are on the streets doing business with the locals. The town was pretty much deserted except for the Jamaicans buying a fry fish here and there. The tourists were being entertained behind the big walls separating the average Jamaican small business from the dollars being spent in our country.

[This message has been edited by CHISEL (edited 10-11-2005).]

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firelynx
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posted 10-11-2005 03:34 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for firelynx     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Chow mi nuh waan a ting bout tourism and it's mismanagement. Visitors use to mingle wid the local populace but the people didn't have the sense to realize that all the pressure to sell dem something would drive them off to more sanitary surroundings.

If the international word was that the local people respected the tourist desire to be comfortable and enjoy a pleasurable stay, den the all inclusive would just be another choice instead of the major one.

Just like reggae music, reggaeboyz football and many other things Jamaican, those who should know better do not care or have the ability to see the big picture so they abuse it and when it is taken away dem chat all kind of foolishness.

I am not referring to you Shatta, but too many people only love to blame other thing instead of developing the foresight to protect their own bread and butter and then take steps to secure a better environment for that good thing to flourish.

How many average Jamaicans could now be still be better off if they had realize that they would profit from allowing the visitors to walk freely without stressing dem out and supported the santions for certain behaviors towards people who came to enjoy the little island.


Everybody luv cry to the government but we are not doing enough to help ourselves.

Mobay leaders heard how the tourist dem were complaining about having to run the gauntlet, yet the community on a whole did not galvanize to discourage DE harassment.

It's not tourism per se but is a naivety about consequences.

The whole Jamaican community and need to agree that the island and themselves will benefit immensely by being a place with a very low threat quotient.

More Time


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Big Mountain
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posted 10-11-2005 03:48 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Big Mountain     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Shatta_Cleve:
Who gives a *&&^ck about an Industry with 70% leakage anyway? Full time we diversify our industries away from being that shuffling grinning black rasta for white people pleasure.

How about investing in our other industries for a damn change

respect


I am suprised at you Shatta - How can you say that about our # 1 Income earner? Tourism is the bread & Butter of thousands of Jamaicans. Providing Jobs and livelihood of thousands including Hotel workers, farmers, manufacturers, suppliers, craftsmen, laborers, construction workers, fishermen, Bus Drivers, Tour Operators, etc. Pouring Billions of dollars into the Jamaican economy. If you destroy Tourism where are you going to find employment for these people? Tax shortfall? farmers surplus? etc. Come on man, you know the multiplier effect of tourism and it's importance to the Jamaican Economy.

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Big Mountain
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posted 10-11-2005 03:59 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Big Mountain     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by CHISEL:
Good point. How much of the tourism dollar trickles down to the average Jamaican? I was in Ocho Rios for a few nights recently and when I was on the streets at you couldn't tell that you were in a major tourist destination. None of the visitors are on the streets doing business with the locals. The town was pretty much deserted except for the Jamaicans buying a fry fish here and there. The tourists were being entertained behind the big walls separating the average Jamaican small business from the dollars being spent in our country.
[This message has been edited by CHISEL (edited 10-11-2005).]

And, we all know the reason for this "Garrison". Hint: A couple years ago, even tourist could hang out in Trench Town mingling with the good people they meet. They could walk freely, buy and support any local business as they please. Then one fine day, all the bad man dem teck ova di streets, husslas, shottas, robbas, duppy makers, gi mih a money crew, etc. Then Butch & Issa decided to build Garrisons to protect their interest. Do you blame them?

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banana boss man
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posted 12-03-2005 09:04 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for banana boss man     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Big Mountain:
Was watching MTV yesterday with a group of International friends who came to visit. Damian Marley's video "Welcome to Jamrock" came on. I was in shock and awe. What was this guy thinking? He chooses to dirtiest streets with garbage piling up on both sides, people living in carboard boxes, shattered zinc homes, man eating out of garbage bins. Utterly disgusting to see the image this guy is broadcasting to the world. Not to mention the Jamaican Flag featured in the video was on a wall with paint peeling and filled with gunshot holes.[/Q i think the welcome to jamrock video is good cos it shows true jamaica, not the happy resort everyone sees it as

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