Wakanda News Details

Forgiving the criminals - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

THE EDITOR: The gardener with fork and hoe on his shoulders goes to till the land. Some time later he returns with produce as proof of his labours.

The student burns the midnight oil and is rewarded with the expected results.

One wonders how the police come up empty-handed when searching for criminals.

Are they looking in the wrong places? Are they unable to identify the bad elements? Or are they outsmarted by those operating from underground? We hate to think that they are afraid to venture into badman territory. Are they reactive or proactive. Are the criminals taking the initiative?

Who is going to restrain a society described as violent? All plans have failed. The state of emergency gives all the rounds up to the penultimate to the criminals and the law-enforcers respite to recuperate and launch another assault, this time a successful one.

Some philosophical questions we need to answer: Did God make prime ministers and presidents? If yes, then He also made citizens. If no, then ordinary citizens are a figment of man's imagination.

Are police part of the creation? If yes, so are criminals. If no, certain activities in the society are producing persona non grata.

Religious leaders have exclaimed from the pulpit, time and time again, that we were made in the image and likeness of God. Does that mean all men or only certain people?

If the statement is true, why have some elevated themselves to the 'chosen ones' and others relegated to the 'damned?'

Since the greenery was removed from the Trinity Hills making us a republic, the Trini spirit has descended to the abyss of heartlessness.

The land is crying out for the blood of people who are making life uncomfortable: with merciless killings, illegal invasions of our homes, imposing unauthorised taxes on the business community, the poor driven to destitution, victims deprived of justice, people in high places forgiven for serious infringements of the law, amnesty given to those who owe taxes and national insurance premiums, and the rich suing the wealthy to dispossess them.

These unwanted events are all in the public domain. Water for all happens as floods only in the rainy season. Potholes, the new bandits, holding up the flow of traffic. Salary increases with back pay given generously to public officials who volunteered to serve. Inaccurate reporting by the people in the counting houses. Only crumbs remaining for social services to allocate to those in need. The bread that the devil did not knead seems to be devoured by insiders.

Do we need a state of emergency to catch the plunderers or are we going to be selective in classifying some as criminals and the others given a slap on the wrist to continue their white-collar crimes?

Are the defenders of the law trying to use reverse psychology to deter the criminals by making the jails and detention centres unsanitary and deplorable? Then they are also punishing those who have to manage these 'hellholes.'

We who are claiming to be more civilised than criminals should be more

You may also like

Sorry that there are no other Black Facts here yet!

This Black Fact has passed our initial approval process but has not yet been processed by our AI systems yet.

Once it is, then Black Facts that are related to the one above will appear here.

More from Home - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Arts Facts