Are Jamaicans Ready For A Second Female PM?
http://mimbari.livejournal.com/145516.html
December 30-2011.
Are Jamaicans Ready For A Second Female PM?
The first one only served ONE term in office, because the commonweal in Jamaica was impatient with her inability to deliver on her promises.
However, could Portia Simpson Miller deliver the goods this time around, (41 of the 63 seats)? I think not.
Jamaican men are extremely chauvinistic, and having a woman at the helm of government makes it extremely difficult to get policies moving within the male dominated echelons of the governmental bureaucracy.
Unemployment And Crime:
These two elements are an ongoing dilemma for any government to get a grip of.
Lack of employment leads to lawlessness and criminal activities. And when the young and educated leave school and college, and are unable to find gainful employment. Some will emigrate abroad in search of betterment, while others become impatient, angry, resentful of authority, and less concerned with Civic, Moral, Legal, and other Social responsibilities.
Derryck.
NYC.
December 30-2011.
Are Jamaicans Ready For A Second Female PM?
The first one only served ONE term in office, because the commonweal in Jamaica was impatient with her inability to deliver on her promises.
However, could Portia Simpson Miller deliver the goods this time around, (41 of the 63 seats)? I think not.
Jamaican men are extremely chauvinistic, and having a woman at the helm of government makes it extremely difficult to get policies moving within the male dominated echelons of the governmental bureaucracy.
Unemployment And Crime:
These two elements are an ongoing dilemma for any government to get a grip of.
Lack of employment leads to lawlessness and criminal activities. And when the young and educated leave school and college, and are unable to find gainful employment. Some will emigrate abroad in search of betterment, while others become impatient, angry, resentful of authority, and less concerned with Civic, Moral, Legal, and other Social responsibilities.
Derryck.
NYC.
Labels: Jamaican Politics