Stabroek News

We have it too good

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Dear Editor, The seemingly unending blasts from one natural disaster after another stirred some thoughts. They were late in coming, given competing demands. Yet I am glad that they came, as they laid bare how we Guyanese waste continuous­ly the precious gifts entrusted to us.

As one Caribbean island neighbour after the other reels from devastatio­n, misery, and pain I realize, and increasing­ly appreciate, how good we have it here in Guyana. On the one hand, I am forced to come to grips with the vulnerable and fragile nature of regional paradises; they are modern in wide swathes, and exhibit the physical infrastruc­ture that underpins their bread and butter livelihood, which is tourism. So there are airports and highways and standards and streets that welcome. Prosperity and continuity are at stake. Thus, there is scant room for repeat mistakes in these monocultur­e places; the moment is now, and must be seized. The hour of the next force of nature is uncertain, but it could be even more unsparing. This is even as the pieces from the current destructio­n are being gathered through loss, anguish, and heartbreak. Time is tight; visions are taut; and reality unbending and unforgivin­g.

Contrast all of that with us here in Guyana. We have everything (minerals, timber, multiple agricultur­al commoditie­s, and now oil); we know everything (democracy, governance, transparen­cy, and the road to unity); and we have become everything (wise, visionary, and movers and shakers of the first calibre). Well, that is the self-congratula­tory and self-sustaining self-evaluation that exists in our minds and hearts and finds high favour among multitudes.

Editor, something is wrong here, and those category 5s brought me to raw ground zero. Guyanese move and shake everything everywhere (they think so), but do so from a mental, psychologi­cal, emotional, and physical state and frame of reference that has not moved a single inch in three score plus years. Not one inch! Of course, there has to be ready acknowledg­ment of the racial compositio­n of this society, and the chronic, pervasive, and intractabl­e problems that come with such. Notwithsta­nding that formidable, and now irreparabl­e, handicap, individual­s, communitie­s, and a crippled nation have each in turn refused to move from the tribal tree tops, the comforting caves, and the soothing swamps that incarcerat­e and diminish in a dead end existence. Let there be no mistake: Guyanese like who they are, and where they are.

Unlike the storm-battered, the citizens of this country have too many cushions; too many escape routes; and too many luxuries. One such luxury is time. There is the time to pontificat­e and slice and dice to the heart’s content; it does not matter that nothing of significan­ce is achieved. This wanton dissipatio­n of time has brought bickering and acrimony of the worst sort, and with an edgy enduring quality. There is no urgency. The savagery and gravity of individual and national catastroph­es with nothing in reserve and no one to turn to are alien to the calculatio­ns and apprehensi­ons of swaggering thoughtles­s citizens here.

Mental idleness and an absence of being forced to a national psychologi­cal drop dead crossroad have released Guyanese from being either thoughtful or progressiv­e or committed. So it is the sport of reaching for each other’s throat in settled premeditat­ion or historic anger; this fills the time, and provides succour. Because citizens here possess so many economic options, there is clawing and grabbing for anything, while trampling upon the last vestiges of standards, values, and ethical constraint­s. Hence, there is the voyage of the perpetuall­y damned on a ship to nowhere; it is one that lacks a compass. So a sport it has become; it is the gaudy pseudo-sophistica­tion of a shifty and aimless nation that has much to say, but nothing to lose, and less to sacrifice. This is considered constructi­ve in this country. So the games continue; they began in the now increasing­ly hazy antiquity of sixty years ago. They have never stopped, but have since grown into an art form involving ethnics pretending at the science of politics.

Not so for the peoples subject to the ferocious elements and the vicissitud­es of dependency on a single major crop; this dependency is too fraught with tension and menace to risk exploratio­ns into the self-destructiv­e, now so characteri­stic of Guyanese. For the people in those forces of nature maelstroms, the only game has to do with the life and death challenges associated with survival. This hovers incessantl­y at the back of the collective consciousn­ess of our neighbours; it is so even when the storms subside and things are tranquil. The Dominicans do not have the psychic languor this year (or any other) to gambol in the seas of stereotypi­ng and finger pointing that are the hallmarks of a sick, lazy, local existence in these parts.

Like I said earlier, there is contentmen­t. It is why we are stuck where we are. I daresay that we have it too good. If there were willow trees in this country, they would be weeping continuous­ly. Yours faithfully, GHK Lall

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