Thursday, December 22, 2022

Christmas Letter 2022

 

DON and MAGGIE MITCHELL

OWEN LANE, NORTH HILL

P O BOX 83, THE VALLEY

AI-2640 ANGUILLA, BWI

 

Cellphones: (264) 235 8654

(264) 235 7896

Email: idmitch@anguillanet.com

 mmmitch@anguillanet.com

 

11 December, 2022

Dear family and friends,

DON AND MAGGIE’S CHRISTMAS PHOTO LETTER, 2022

The year has been kind to us, and we hope it has been to you, too.  Maggie’s incipient GERD and emphysema are both being held in check with treatment.  Don’s failing heart and increasing blood pressure are succumbing to medication.  His heart went from 70 to 60 to 50 to 40 beats a minute and then stabilised at 38.  It seems we may have a few more years with you than we anticipated at this time last year.

This year was our 50th wedding anniversary (22 April).  How we made it to this milestone is a mystery to us.  We can only put it down to having no children.  That choice gave us the chance to indulge our preferences and to live our lives relatively free of stress.  Don was able to concentrate on one obsession after the other.  Maggie was able to concentrate on taking care of Don.

One of the highlights of the year was the visit of Don’s nephew, Mitch with attachments, in January.

Mitch at the beach.

Then, Don’s niece Michelle and her family and friends, Chantelle, Gage, Amy, and Charlie, in March.

 

Brian and Michelle at Shoal Bay beach.

Maggie’s brother Mac, sister Bridget, niece Kitty and husband Fred, and great nieces and nephews, Leo, Carmen, and Joey joined us in April, in time for the wedding anniversary.

 

Mac, Bridget, Kitty, and attachments come to visit from France and the UK.



Dinner on our veranda.  Another view of the Mccarthy invasion. 

 Bridget and Mopie the dog picking breakfast.

 

Don and Maggie on Sally’s veranda.  Don’s fruit salad for desert.

Sally and Mary Ann treated Kitty’s children to a US style Barbeque in the garden.  the adults dined more elegantly on the veranda.

Sister Alix and her Brian visited us in Anguilla off and on a couple of additional times.


Locating Alix’s land boundary.

We also hosted a squad of Temple University archaeology and anthropology students in our guest apartment.  They worked on Elysia’s annual archaeological dig at the Hughes’ Estate from May to June.  We are all looking forward to Elysia publishing her thesis when her doctorate is confirmed.

Being both now dedicated retirees, our main activity outside the home is having lunch two or three times a week at one of our favourite restaurants.  A hearty lunch and two drinks are followed by a siesta until about 4:00pm, when we wake up to check on emails and WhatsApps.

 

Maggie waiting for lunch to arrive at DaVida’s

The summer was long, hot, and very dry.  Between January and July, our area in North Hill received only 5 inches of rain.  Some of the fruit trees produced fruit, particularly the Papaya, Guava, and Sugar Apples.  The Barbados Cherries and the Figs were not so happy.  As you see below, the front lawn, given it consists of Agaves, gravel, and concrete did not complain.

 

Don and Maggie’s “front lawn” this summer.

 

The first bunch of red grape flowers this winter.

Friends Becky Haskins and Edson Charles got married, and Don struggled to remember how to say a few words in public.

 

Don speaking at Becky and Edson’s wedding

 

Don, Maggie, Viviane, Rolf, Sally, Mary Ann, and Deknur waiting for Becky to arrive for her wedding party.

Maggie with Megaera at table on our veranda.

Maggie’s 75th birthday dinner was at Dick Foran’s favourite restaurant, Hibernia, in Island Harbour.  Maggie and I were hosted by our walking group and friends.  To our amazement, Dick arranged by long distance with Mary Pat to pay for all the drinks, which must have cost him a fortune.  As you see below, we lifted our glasses in a toast to him, far away in Toronto.  In the years before he gave up his lease here in Anguilla and moved back to Canada, he always took us out to dinner at Hibernia on Maggie’s birthday.  So, this was a lovely gesture on his part for old time’s sake.

 

Maggie’s 75th birthday dinner at Hibernia Restaurant.

 

Maggie’s birthday cake, a gift from Hibernia.

During the year, Don continuing to populate his Blog with acerbic articles on every type of social issue that got him mad enough to put pen to paper.  They attracted a satisfying number of complaints.  If you are desperate for something to read, you can find them here:  https://donmitchellcbeqc.blogspot.com/

We hope the year 2023 will be good for all of us.  Let the new winter Covid surge be mild.  And, let the forecast recession not be too long and too hard.

Meanwhile, have a Happy Christmas and a prosperous New Year.

Don and Maggie

Friday, December 16, 2022

Modern Slavery in Anguilla?

 

This is an essay on the development of a form of modern slavery in Anguilla.  Up to the date of publication, the Labour Department has not responded to an invitation to comment.  That is not to suggest they have any obligation to comment, nor that they are in any way complicit in the evils described in the following pages.

We must not turn our heads away from the benefits of pouring sunlight on our festering wounds.  Blocking sunlight prevents one of the surest cures of infection and encourages further festering.

In Antigua and Barbuda, for decades, a minority of politicians, police, and immigration officers controlled the illegal drugs, brothel-keeping, and gambling industries of that country.  Generations of police and immigration officers have retired on pensions having spent their careers doing little more than ferrying trafficked foreign girls through the airport, and using official vehicles to transport contraband and brown paper bags full of money from place to place.  They shut down and destroyed human rights activist and journalist Tim Hector and his newspaper, The Outlet, which specialized in revealing public corruption in Antigua and Barbuda.

In Montserrat, for decades, a minority of locals and corrupt British officers conspired together to defraud the UK's Department for International Development (DfID) and the Montserrat people.  Millions of dollars, intended for the aid of the people of this volcano-ravaged island, were diverted into the pockets of corrupt foreign and local actors, until in 2020 the entire Department had to be closed.  The corruption was covered up and its extent has never been fully revealed.  Montserrat can claim the unique achievement of having been responsible for the shutting down of one of the most influential British Government Departments ever to have existed. 

We will not touch on the British Virgin Islands.  The state of public corruption in that Overseas Territory is too raw and embarrassing even for mentioning.

-------------------------------------

Anguilla’s work permit law and practice appear to be fostering a new form of oppression.  Some Anguillian employers appear to have created new avenues for exploiting the labour of their foreign workers.  They do this by abusing the work permit regulations.  They do so with impunity. 

It is the same in every country.  Anguillians generally won’t do the lower paid jobs in their own community.  The demand for manual labourers, housekeepers, gardeners, security guards, nurses, and carers for the elderly, far outstrips the domestic supply.  Would-be employers must turn overseas to fill these jobs.  Work permits are required.  Their issue is discretionary.  The discretions have multiplied.  Discretions are open to abuse.

Under the old, now repealed Control of Employment Act, and the Work Permit Regulations made under it, the relationship between the foreign worker and the employer at first appeared clear cut.  That Act has now been repealed and replaced by the new 2018 Labour (Relations) Act.  The original Regulations remain unchanged.

Some employers have not been slow to exploit the opportunities for abuse offered by the law and the system.  Some of our more unscrupulous Anguillian employers exploit their workers in the murky area of work permits.

The provision that the foreign worker is obliged to stay out of the island until the permit is granted or renewed was originally stringently observed.  The rule was frequently ignored.

Sometimes an employer illegally encouraged a foreign worker to enter the island pretending to be a visitor.  The employer then illegally put him to work while the application for a work permit was processed.  The worker did not dare complain if he was treated unfairly.

Sometimes the employer illegally delayed the application for several months.  Meanwhile he exploited the labour of the foreign worker who was too afraid of the consequences if he complained.

A work permit is not transferrable.  Where a worker is being exploited, he may understandably want to switch employers.  The law requires him to first leave the island until his new work permit is granted. 

The practice has now arisen that the permission of the first employer and the cooperation of the Labour Department are required to switch employers.  There are no apparent guidelines or standards establishing the circumstances when a foreign employee may be allowed to remain while the new permit is being processed. 

This need for the consent of the original employer to leave his employment provides more opportunities for exploitation by unscrupulous employers.  The rule about first obtaining the consent of the original employer is sometimes overlooked.  The rule about having to leave the island for a period is never enforced, out of an alleged feeling of humanity.

Where a particular employer is not in favour with the authorities, the system can be made to work against him.  The foreign employee then suffers discrimination due to no fault of his own.  Unconstrained administrative discretion is the enemy of policy and principle.

Before a permit can be issued by the Minister, the Labour Department is required to certify that there is no Anguillian willing to do the job.  Some Commissioners were of the highest integrity, some were not.

The law requires that the employer show that the post was been advertised before he can apply for a work permit.  There is a discretion to ignore the failure to advertise the position.  Innumerable and ingenious reasons are now offered to the Labour Department for the omission.

The employer was originally responsible for the cost of the work permit.  He could not deduct those costs from the employee’s wages.  This rule is now sometimes ignored.  The law is vague on who must pay.  I am told that an informal “rule” has now arisen that the employer can deduct one half of the cost of the permit from wages.  The worker is in too vulnerable a position to make a complaint to the Commissioner.

Originally, only in rare cases was a foreign worker permitted to bring in a spouse or other family member.  Certainly, children were rarely allowed as they were an unnecessary burden on the social services.  This has changed now.  It is said the old system was inhumane.  But the result is that a heavy burden is being placed on our education, welfare, and health systems.

Sexual favours were sometimes asked for and granted if you wanted to keep your job or to get your work permit - or your husband’s or your brother’s work permit.  The feudal droit du seigneur seems to have returned to Anguilla.  Complaints to the Minister or the Labour Department fall on deaf ears.

Previously, once a work permit expired, the employee was obliged immediately to leave the island.  If the employer showed that the job was advertised, and there were still no Anguillians qualified and willing to fill the position, the work permit might be renewed, and the worker would be allowed back onto the island.  The system was inconvenient, but it reminded the worker that he was here temporarily to work.  It was not intended to be a back door to permit economic immigration.

The employer was and is not permitted to hold the employee hostage by detaining the employee’s passport during the term of the employment.  This rule is now occasionally breached by the more abusive employers.  Passports are now occasionally held by some employers and, contrary to law, not returned to the holder after the permit has been issued.  The worker is kept in a form of servitude.

The applicant for a work permit is supposed to deposit a sum of money to cover the return fare at the end of the employment.  This requirement is now discretionary, with all the evils this entails.  I have known cases where unscrupulous employers bring in foreign workers on a promise that they will be covered by a work permit which is then never applied for.  As a result, no security deposit is asked for or paid.  The illegality works relatively smoothly so long as relations are happy.  It is only when the foreign worker, often illiterate and speaking only Spanish, falls out with the employer and is fired that problems arise.  Having no money, he must then depend on a kindly local person to give him housing and food until some charity can come up with the air fare to get him back home.  He can be marooned in Anguilla for months while barred from working.  The fraudulent employer is never prosecuted so far as I know.

Many of these unfortunate foreign workers whose work permits expire without renewal, stay on illegally in Anguilla.  Due to their illegal status, they are deprived of most of the social, medical, and educational services available to those legally on the island.  They are too terrified of being penalised by the authorities to complain, or to take advantage of the amnesties government offers from time to time.

The Minister has a discretion whether to allow the work permit or not.  There were and are no firm rules or guidelines published governing how the Minister must decide whether to grant the permit.  Sometimes it was granted, and sometimes it was not.  Some ministers were honourable, some were not.  There is no point complaining, especially if you are not an Anguillian.  The system is stacked against you.

Where there is an unregulated discretion granted to a government official, abuse is often not far behind.  As there were and are no published rules or guidelines for the granting of a work permit, suspicions soon grew that the system was tainted.

In Anguilla it sometimes seems that all public standards tend to deteriorate over time.  A social version of the Second Law of Thermodynamics seems to apply.  As every schoolchild knows, this Law says that any closed system will always move away from order towards disorder.  The result is that the entropy of Anguillian society continually increases.

My fear is that if work permit standards are not properly established and published, Anguilla may become another Antigua or Montserrat, governed by tribal systems and rotten to the core.

Thursday, December 08, 2022

New Anguillian Morality

 

Anguilla is about to enter upon the year 2023 with government legalising casinos.  They are doing so with the usual caveats that it will be restricted only to “high-end” players.  Locals will not be permitted to use the facilities.  So, there will be no negative social impact on Anguilla.

The Premier has publicly said that this activity, once licensed, will provide much-needed revenue to support Anguilla’s social programmes.  He sees no problem with it.  The government has published that it expects to raise EC$5 million from this activity.  So, this APM administration is all on board with the idea of developing Anguilla as a casino-friendly destination.

This is not the first time that this initiative has emerged in Anguilla.  But it is the first time with the support of the island’s government.  When in the early 1980s a Sicilian hotel developer from St Maarten met with the then Chief Minister and put a proposal to him to cut off the western quarter of the island and turn it into a resort area to be occupied by his hotels and casinos, the Chief Minister called on the Chief of Police to take the developer to Blowing Point Port and to put him on a boat with instructions never to return to Anguilla.  The diorama he produced to illustrate his proposal still hangs on the wall in the Land Registry.

A few years later, in the 1990s, the US entertainment magnate, Robert “Bob” Johnson of television’s BET Network, made another casino proposal.  He wanted to dredge the Road Pond and construct a casino and condominium apartments.  Government put it out for public discussion and the mood was overwhelmingly one of opposition.  When it emerged that the western end of the Pond consisted of an estimated forty feet of rock salt that would have to be removed by blasting, the project died.

In 2020, the first year of this Administration’s term, there was another proposal to put a casino in a marina in the Road Pond.  The leader of the opposition party in the House of Assembly has admitted that the outgoing Administration first approved of this project.  She was on radio supporting the proposal on the ground that it would bring much-needed development to the island.  However, the proposal met with almost universal public disapproval, and appears to have been quietly dropped.

Back in April 2019, the AUF administration issued a press release that they hired consultants to write a report about casinos for Anguilla.  So, it was not surprising, in the last week or two, to hear one of the young, male elected members of the opposition AUF party in the House of Assembly adding his voice to those in support of this proposal.  He gave a serious and studied argument why Anguilla had to enter the modern era, casinos and all, and why the resulting revenue would be good for the Treasury.  He has obviously not read any of the hundreds of studies on the social damage caused by casinos.

We do not know who has now approached our new government with a renewed proposal to put casinos in Anguilla.  It may have been some of the bigger foreign-owned hotel owners who come from places where it is normal for hotels to have casinos.  It may have come from some rather more unsavoury types.  The gaming and brothel businesses in nearby St Maarten are reputed to be owned and run by local politicians and their Sicilian mafia bosses.  In Curacao, it is the New Jersey mafia who, together with the local political bosses, are reported to control the industry.  You just need to Google the terms.

In previous years, before the casinos of St Maarten came under unified management, it was not unusual to see that on a change of casino management, the old crew left the island with their arms in slings and the bullet holes well-bandaged.  The new bosses entered with bulges under their arms.  Unless the mafia takes immediate control of any casinos that are licensed in Anguilla, similar exciting events can be expected for a while until ownership issues get sorted out.

I was not surprised to read an article in support of casinos in a recent issue of The Anguillian Newspaper written by the youthful past Minister of Economic Development.  It must have been his Ministry that put up the proposal to include legalizing of casinos.  He is young, impetuous, and inexperienced in the world.  So, he can be expected to rise in support of the proposal now that it has come to be questioned.

The most surprising thing of all was to hear a Baptist preacher on radio a few days ago giving a passionate speech in favour not only of legalizing casinos and lotteries but also brothels (or whorehouses, or bordellos, or however you call houses of ill repute).  He called them by the Anguillian euphemism, “houses of entertainment”.  It was a stunning reversal for a preacher of morality.  Maybe he was just being sarcastic and is not really in favour.

I have been thinking of what these developments mean for Anguilla and her people’s future.  There must be some good explanation for this new evolution in morality.  All three of these young men share certain characteristics that may explain their positions.

They are young and naïve.  They have no experience or learning of the history of casinos.  They have never made any kind of study of the damage the casino environment does to the lives of its habitués and their families.  They have never read any of the hundreds of reports on the societal evils of casino gambling.  They are innocents.  They can’t really be blamed.

They enjoy the over-confidence of youth.  They believe that they can control the heartbreak and crime that casinos will inevitably bring to our families.  They believe they can keep Anguillians out of the temptations and addictions of casino gambling.  They sincerely believe that Anguillians’ past opposition to casinos was mistaken and misguided.

They are misinformed.  They believe that opposition to casinos come only from “white people”.  I have heard them saying on radio that they believe that these white people are hell-bent on keeping our Anguillians back from developing ourselves.  We can do this apparently by emerging into the modern world of casinos and houses of prostitution.  This xenophobia and race blaming is very effective in Anguilla when you want to rile up public sentiment against something or someone.

The preacher who spoke so passionately in favour of casinos and houses of male entertainment was also in favour of lotteries.  He thought casinos were a sign that Anguilla was modernising.  He pointed to the fact that there are several “madrokas” or Dominican Republic lottery outlets operating in Anguilla.  Madroka Anguilla Lottery Ltd was in fact licensed three or four years ago to run lotteries in Anguilla.

It is a fraud on the revenue for lottery tickets to be sold without government collecting the 10% fee on each ticket.  We can’t collect revenue on illegal tickets.  Yet, illegal lottery ticket sellers openly operate in Anguilla today.  The police very occasionally shut one down, but they soon reopen without any difficulty.

There are scores of brothels operating openly in Anguilla.  They front as sports bars and other houses of entertainment.  It is a serious offence to operate a house of prostitution.  The police occasionally shut one down, but it soon reopens.  No one seems to care that these facilities are illegal and not medically inspected.  It is not surprising to learn that sexually transmitted diseases are on the increase.

I have a modest, Swiftian proposal to add to these suggestions for increasing government revenue.  It should fit in well with Anguilla’s modern public morality.  My proposal will also prevent the children of poor people in Anguilla from being a burden to their parents or to the country.  A young healthy child under a year of age is a most delicious, nourishing, and wholesome food, whether stewed, roasted, baked, or boiled.  I have no doubt it will equally serve in a fricassee or a ragout.” (Johnathan Swift).  I propose that of the 200-odd babies born in Anguilla each year, a nominal 25% be butchered and the best cuts sold in supermarkets.  At the price of veal, the resulting increase in GST revenue will greatly benefit the Treasury.

Given the lack of any apparent public opposition to the proposals for legalising casinos, lotteries, and bordellos, there should be no objection from the churches to the idea of selling baby meat.  The silence from church and community leaders serves to reinforce the acceptability of casinos and brothels.  Today’s churchmen will be so busy raising revenue by holding revivalist meetings that they will not object to this modest proposal of mine.  It will be a benefit to the poor and the public and increase government revenue.  It should be a runaway success all round.

--------------------------------------------------------------------

NOTE:  Anguilla as a country is less than 70 years old.  Anguillians have no literary heritage.  Indeed, only within the last 50 years has any Anguillian writing of any kind been published.  Thus, save for a few exceptions, doggerel takes the place of poetry.

Unsurprisingly, we have no understanding of, nor appreciation for, irony, satire, sarcasm, mockery, or parody.  Most Anguillians don’t recognize sarcasm or satire.  Everything said or written is interpreted literally.

As a result, the last two paragraphs of the above essay, based on Johnathan Swift’s famous satirical essay “A Modest Proposal” were taken literally.  The proposal to sell and eat baby meat was read literally and considered offensive, even by English language teachers who read the essay.  It was politely rejected by the local newspaper.  


Friday, December 02, 2022

Fiat Money?


Once upon a time, hundreds of years ago, money had intrinsic value.  Coins were minted in gold or silver.  Money was then a physical item.  This money got its value from the worth of the bullion it represented.  If the coin said it was worth $1.00, then it had a dollar’s worth of gold in it.  This was straightforward.  But the weight of the coins was inconvenient for carrying around.

First the Knights Templar during the time of the Crusades, and then various governmental affiliates began to issue paper notes to the value of the gold or silver they kept in their vaults.  They promised they held gold or silver to the value of the notes they issued.  Those notes were said to be “backed” by gold or silver.  Not every country made sure their notes were backed by bullion.  Such currencies were very unstable and frequently collapsed.

In 1971 and 1972, the US and British governments moved away from backing their currencies with bullion.  Like other issuers of most modern paper currencies, they began to print money as needed.  The Eastern Caribbean dollar is a classic example of a currency that is not backed by gold or silver.  There is no requirement for the notes of the EC Central Bank to be backed by either bullion or foreign currency.

These unbacked currencies are said to be “fiat” currencies.  “Fiat” is a Latin word that can be translated as “let it be done”.  Our currency only has a value because the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank says it has that value.  The Central Bank simply said, “Let these bank notes we are issuing have the values we print on them.”  Unlike money backed by gold or silver, there is no real value to fiat money in itself.  Once everyone accepts the fiat of the Central Bank, all is in order.  Problems only arise when people begin to have doubts about the value of the currency.

One result of this fiat system is that currencies risk losing value due to inflation.  They even risk becoming worthless in the event of hyperinflation.  In some countries, when the people lose confidence in the value of their money, inflation can double in a single day.  There is then no acceptable medium of exchange.  People refuse to accept the currency, and all commerce collapses or turns back to barter.

Has the British colony of Anguilla found a way to issue fiat money?  I ask the question because over the past two years the Government of Anguilla (GoA) appears to have been printing money to meet the government’s every need to look good.  Its expenditure is not connected to how much money it can raise.  I am not sure that is legal or sensible.  Why have the Foreign and Commonwealth Development Office (the FCDO) and the Central Bank permitted this financially irresponsible state of affairs to develop unchecked?

Governments throughout the Caribbean region notoriously view their Social Security Fund as a cash cow to be raided at every emergency.  Anguilla is no different.  As part of the “banking resolution” back in 2016, our Fund took its first major hit.  Government borrowed over EC$200 million from our Social Security Fund to buy the two cash-strapped local banks.  I am not aware of any effort to repay any part of this borrowing.

In 2020, at the height of the recent pandemic, government raided the Fund again.  Contrary to the purpose of the Fund, government used it to pay unemployment benefits to every unemployed person in Anguilla who had not contributed to Social Security. or who had not contributed the required fifty weekly payments.  These monthly payments were at first EC$800.00 and then EC$1,000.00.  This freeness went on for over a year.  Social Security was encouraged to create a programme to pay the same unemployment assistance to persons who were social security contributors.  All these unlawful payments were, I understand, legalised after the event by having the House of Assembly approve them.

The Fund has now been sucked dry.  There are few alternative sources of ready money left for government to give away.

According to an article in The Anguillian Newspaper last week, a recently concluded Social Security conference saw the experts recommending that we increase contributions from 10% to 12% as the Social Security Fund has almost been depleted.  I am not surprised.

Starting in February 2022, the Russian/Ukrainian War resulted in sanctions and blockades.  The prices of goods skyrocketed.  The GST Act came into effect in mid-2022.  The result was further rising prices.  Inflation is sky rocketing in Anguilla.

To help with the rapidly rising cost of living during the past year, GoA is imitating the US and UK governments.  It has been issuing EC$500.00 food vouchers to every person over 70 years of age in Anguilla.  This money was not budgeted for.  Indeed, there was no public consultation on the need to give away money.  There was no discussion of the merits and demerits of giving the money to every 70-year-old in Anguilla.  There was no public discussion at all.  The news item on Radio Anguilla to the effect that GoA had taken the decision to grant this largesse caught us all by surprise.

GoA simply announced one day that every person in Anguilla over the age of 70 was entitled to go to the Inland Revenue Department (the IRD) and collect a voucher for EC$500.00.  The voucher could be presented in any grocery for food or liquor.  It was later announced that we could go back to the IRD and collect a second EC$500.00 voucher.  So, the total amount of the gift to each of the over-70s amounted to EC$1,000.00.

My guess is that there are about 1,000 persons over 70 years of age in Anguilla (local and ex-pat).  That means that these two unauthorized gifts must have cost about EC$1 million.  This money was not in the budget.  Perhaps this unauthorized expenditure from the Consolidated Fund was subsequently made lawful by an Act of the HoA.  That would be easy to do as the GoA controls the House (most of the members of the HoA are either cabinet ministers or junior ministers in the GoA.

Subsequent authorisation of an illegal government payment (if that is what it was) is not the point.  When the budget was prepared, no thought was given to raising the money to make these gifts.  It was not a budgeted item.  It appears GoA was permitted by the FCDO to spend unlimited amounts of money that was not budgeted.  I suppose because they had done the same thing in the UK, they could hardly object.  I am not sure I approve.

The next unauthorized government giveaway was a surprise gift of two amounts of EC$500.00 paid to each household account with the electricity company (ANGLEC).  This money was deposited directly to ANGLEC.  Note that this handout was not limited to Anguillians.  Nor were the recipients required to be certified as “needy” of financial assistance.  Nor was it limited to persons aged over 70 years.  It was paid indiscriminately to all residential accounts at ANGLEC, foreign or local, retired or working, millionaire or indigent.  I am not sure I approve.

The gift was ours whether we wanted it or needed it.  We had no say in the granting of this largesse.  If we objected to it as being illegal and unnecessary in our case, we could do nothing about it.

It was not a budgeted expenditure.  It was not authorised by any Act of the HoA.  Nor was it a negligible sum of money.  There must be some 5,000 households in Anguilla.  The cost of this gift, according to my calculation, should amount roughly to EC$5 million.  In my view, not being paid to needy residents, it was a blatant case of vote-buying for the next general elections.  Will it work?

All the evidence is that Western economies are presently in an economic recession.  By next year, consumer confidence is forecast to collapse.  The UK and other major economies will go into a depression.  Unemployment will increase substantially.  The real value of wages is expected to fall by about 50%.  Tourism will temporarily dry up in Anguilla.  Hotel companies will collapse.  Fewer workers will be employed.  Poverty will spread over the island.  But there will be no more gifts of free money to bail us out.

And now we learned last week that GoA will be issuing another unauthorised EC$500.00 food voucher to all seniors, millionaire or otherwise, on the island.  This generous gifting could not happen without the express approval of the FCDO.  They must by law sign off on all major expenditure by GoA.  It is as if the FCDO have given GoA permission to print our own fiat money.  Otherwise, GoA could never find the wherewithal.

But what will the consequences of all this munificence be?  We suspect one of them will be increased taxation.  At the end of the day, the money must come from somewhere.  The ministers are not giving away their own money.  It is more likely than not the workers of this country who will have to pay for all the handouts to the seniors.

Cowrie shells were currency in certain parts of the world many years ago.  With inflation high and about to increase, and given the rate at which the dollar’s value is sinking, should we be thinking about converting our savings into cowrie shells before the end of the year?


Friday, November 11, 2022

Casinos Soon Coming to Anguilla?

Casinos and most forms of public gambling are illegal in Anguilla.  So, I felt a slap in the face when I heard on yesterday’s Radio Anguilla news that government is working on drafting a new Casino Policy and a new Gaming Act for Anguilla.  According to the news, casinos hold great potential for revenue generation.  They will be introduced, the release said, early next year, 2023.  I only heard about it yesterday, but the proposal must have been in the works for some time.  I know we Anguillians are said to be hypocrites, but I did not think that we would allow things to go so far without making a great noise.

Anguillians are already addicted to small-time gambling.  We have gambled our little fortunes away for hundreds of years.  On boat racing days, men traditionally gather on the beaches at Sandy Ground and Maids Bay shouting and gesticulating as they encourage their favourite boat to outwit the competition.  Large sums of money change hands.  Fights and brawls over these unregulated bets are a common sight.  Perhaps because it happens so infrequently, no one comments on it or complains.

Since time immemorial, cock pits have lined the roads of our villages.  I remember forty years ago when every village had at least one, even if it was only the shell of a barely started house.  The men gathered around late in the evening cheering on their champion cocks.  These leapt and cut at each other with their sharpened spurs.  Even larger sums of money changed hands.  Gaming with cocks is still a popular if vulgar Anguillian social activity.  In certain supermarkets, bags of pig food, rich in muscle-building protein, are regularly imported for sale to fighting-cock owners.  Yet, no one has ever been prosecuted for the offence of gaming in public.

Pitbull terriers are prohibited by law in Anguilla.  It is a serious offence to own one, far less to put it in the ring.   This has been so since the tragedy of mauled babies down in The Forest a few years ago.  Yet, dog-fighting continues to this day to be a favourite sport in certain sectors.  Thousands of dollars change hands as their dogs maul each other to death.  The ante for putting your dog in the ring is said to start at US$10,000.00.  The fate of a losing dog is a sad one.  It is not given a burial.  The body of a deceased loser is thrown on the side of the road to show contempt for it.  Protein-rich dogfood is imported and sold solely for the purpose of building up the muscles of these fighting dogs.  I need hardly add that no one in Anguilla has ever been prosecuted for keeping fighting dogs or for putting them in the ring.  None of the statutory prohibitions of cruelty to animals nor illegal gambling is an enforced offence in Anguilla.

And now, as has happened elsewhere, we will experience hard-working gambling addicts spending their week’s wages in casinos.  Efforts will, of course, initially be made to exclude Anguillians from casinos.  There will be solemn promises to this effect.  We remember when foreign-owned casinos were first allowed in St Maarten, and they were prohibited from letting in local St Maarteners.  That did not last long, maybe a decade.  It won’t last long here either.

Initially, casinos will be limited to hotels.  Inevitably, pressure will be brought to permit slot machines and other gambling furniture in restaurants and shopping malls.  The easy availability of opportunities to gamble will attract increasing members of the public, including children.

While occasional gambling may not be harmful, it is now well-known that the pleasure-causing endorphins and serotonins released in the brain by the thrill of the chance can cause gambling to become a habit and then an addiction.  Those who love gambling, inevitably become addicted to it.  People who can ill afford it will continue to play even after losing high stakes, in the hope of winning back what they have lost.  The resulting debt-trap will cause relationships to break down, families to be impoverished, and the gamblers resorting to crime to recover the amounts lost.

Once casinos are introduced into Anguilla, the crime rate will likely begin to rise, as it seems it has everywhere else where public gambling is made legal.  Robberies can be expected to go up, auto theft will probably increase, burglaries will probably soar, and even murders may go up.  Gambling is a target of crime because of the large amounts of money associated with it.

Anguilla has set its target on attracting high quality tourists.  Our hotels are mainly high-end, and we are advertised as up-market.  Gambling tourism is at the opposite end of Anguilla’s long touted objective.  Gambling tourism brings a low quality of visitors to what was formerly an up-market tourism community.

Until the island’s gaming industry is taken over by one of the big mafia families, it will be essentially unregulated and subject to violent administrative incidents.  We all remember that before St Maarten was reportedly taken over and managed by the Sicilian mafia, management changes were usually made by the previous owners departing with their arms in slings on the same aeroplane that brought in the new management.

The large profits that accrue to casino owners inevitably impact the political life of the island.  Politicians in Anguilla may be hard-pressed to resist the huge gifts that will be offered in exchange for a licence, support for a monopoly, or preferential treatment of one kind or another.  Our public life already garners suspicion, and it is frightening to contemplate what it will be like after casino gambling is introduced.

Only three decades ago, the US entertainment entrepreneur Bob Johnson offered to dredge the Road Pond and turn it into a marina.  His one condition was that the law be changed to permit him to construct a casino in the marina.  Public opinion on the island was unanimously against the casino proposal, and Mr Johnson went away.

When the Caribbean Lottery was introduced into the island several years ago, we waited to object too late.  Important local forces were behind it.  Government ignored the warnings and concerns of the public and made it legal anyway.  Now, illegal Santo Domingo Lotto outlets proliferate all over the island.  The police make ineffective and sporadic efforts to close them down.  But there is so much money in them that they soon burst back out into the open, even if illegal.

If we are so anxious to follow St Maarten’s example and raise revenue from every type of immoral activity, perhaps it will not be long before we legalise brothels to provide the services of foreign women in Anguilla.  I understand we can raise substantial taxes from this business.  Never mind that this means of living off the immoral earnings of desperate foreign women, is not only illegal but a quite disgusting form of human trafficking.  Think of all the needed public revenue it could bring in.  Shut your eyes and keep quiet!

Can somebody explain what has changed?  Is it that we are confident that we are so big and strong that we can regulate, manage, and control the evils of the casino industry?

Or is it that we have become so careless and complacent, that we no longer mind what our political leaders are doing that corrupt our life and society?

What are our church leaders doing to oppose this obscene and immoral proposal to license casinos?

Are our church groups discussing and debating the impact this proposal will have on community life if it goes into effect?

What are our women’s groups doing to confront this social evil which will result in so many of our poorer working families finding themselves at the end of the week with no wages or income to put food on the table?

What are our men’s groups doing to protect their brothers and sons from this habit-forming temptation?

What are our social workers and counsellors doing to bring awareness to our community about the threat this proposal to legalise casinos poses to our already fragile mental health?

Why is the Chamber of Commerce silent in the face of this invidious threat to our economy and society?

Is it still true that in Anguilla those who care don’t count, and those who count don’t care?