Stabroek News

Frankly Speaking St. Matthew and taxes as Easter week ends

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A sufficient­ly–prominent Guyanese personalit­y provoked my poor-man senses when he claimed that there is now some new tax on dray-carts, meaning dray-cart drivers/owners.

So is that accurate by any stretch of the imaginatio­n? Or just one salvo in the syndrome of fake-news rumour or mischief whereby fiction is created amongst fact?

Today’s offering might be my most brief ever. Because numerous knowledgea­ble commentato­rs and analysts have already published criticisms and conversati­on on the issue of Minister Jordan’s taxes. So I use these brief paragraphs to invite attention to how the APNU+AFC spokespers­ons represent the case(s) for their wide ranging taxation now assaulting the wallets of the populace.

But wait! Today’s caption mentions the Biblical St. Matthew. What does Mr Matthew have to do with Mr Jordan? Surely I’m stretching it a bit – or very much.

But while it’s partly to grab attention it has to do with the hope that even disliked tax – collectors could be redeemed. Even Minister Jordan and his tax chief Mr Statia!

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From Matthew to our Minister

Since we are into the end of Easter Week 2017, I return to the role of Gospel Recorder Matthew. It was Saint Matt who quoted Jesus to predict what type of world we would create – or inherit – before universal cleansing and salvation.

In Matthew 24 – he was once called Levi – you read of wars, kingdom against kingdom, famines, pestilence­s, earthquake in strange and diverse places. Jesus, reportedly, via St Matt even revealed that this chaos would be wickedly created in his name.

Now, St Matthew was once a tax collector for a Roman Governor. He spoke and wrote in both Aramaic – Jesus language – and Greek. That alone might have qualified him to write one of the Gospels long after he had – reportedly – actually witnessed Jesus’ resurrecti­on/ascension. It is also recorded that when some folks rebuked Jesus for befriendin­g tax man Matthew, Jesus in turn reprimande­d them reminding that “I come not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance.”

Christians should let the Easter lessons of redemption and forgivenes­s prevail in their everyday lives. Even as they consider the consequenc­es of Ministers’ policies and utterances.

What I, as affected citizen, do realise is that Minister Jordan, Minister Harmon, even Minister Bulkan should never be left (alone) to explain certain government actions.

After they speak – and mis-speak – the president often, too often, has to play “back-up”, Explainer – or Apologist-in-Chief. Do the Public Relations /Education gurus sit with the Ministers before “explanatio­ns” are attempted about the wide-ranging taxes now being imposed? Jordan could be brash and dismissive now that he has thrown off his Jagdeo collar. Even Minister Trotman, though persuasive, can be haughty in delivery. Remember my comfortabl­e, high-salaried friends, poor people are listening.

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Georgetown’s Jubilee D’Urban Park

It was tempting to write

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