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DEM REALLY A TEK DIS EMPIRE/GAZA TING TUDDY LIMIT YOWlc MIND U YES A FI HIM BODY BUT WTF IS EMPIRE DOING FI JAMAICA?hmmWHA EXAMPLE A SET UPPP???????hmm.gif ALL UNNO A DUH A SHOW SEH UNNO A SET A  F HOLElc... PUT ANY F WORD INA IT WHEY UNNO LIKEnod.gif. EMPIRE FI LIFE N U WANT  A LIFE BATH?o U A EMBRACE EMPIRE ...U A EMBRACE BLEACHING, EXPLOTIATION OF WOMEN, DEVIL WORSHIPING ABUSE OF POWER AND AUTHORITY...lc. EMBRACE DI F-IN MUSIC BUT UNNO N DIS GAZA TING REALLY GONE TOO FARlc

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You look at the pictures of some of Jamaica's finest butu's & gully monkies and you see big wedding ring pon dem finger, dem have all right fi a pat dem fat front inna video light and bawl our raaaae who A WIFE ROUND HERE.. My question to the MEN in Jamaica on ZONE is.... WIFE to whom or what? hmm

Joke is Joke but wen yu si woman a bleach har skin to point she fava corpse inn casket one has to ask what kinda man a wake up wid that.ewv

In Jamaica we have great divide whe say is uptown & down town no mix aiight.. How the f*ck can a person from the downtown ever hope fi go look job any whe wen dem interview a go happen in the day time, wen sun a shine and dem skin tender? hmm

Any educated person who look pon some a these dancehall pictures no must can si sey dem people de fulla self hate and insecurities? lc

I am under no disillusion sey dem people ya are in the minority as far as the population is concerned but you know wha you do a internet search and is dem pop up, this the face of JAMAICA.. sad

Thank god fi Usain & Bob right now cause a dem a hold up wi ratings.clap

So back to my original question which man yard a f*ck bleachers, and it's actually a two way street cause mi sight bleach face boy photo as wellpity. Which woman a Jamaica can waan de wid man whe stand up infront mirror and a rub on bleaching creamwtf? Dem de man de looking willing fi go do a days work fi put food pon yu table? dem look like providers?hmm

HOT GAL A ROAD?lc
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The face of the Jamaican inner city?lc
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A private jet carrying comedian Dave Chappelle made an emergency landing in Pittsburgh last night because the pilot couldn't handle Chappelle's erratic behavior, TMZ has learned.

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A source extremely familiar with the incident tells TMZ Chappelle boarded a private jet in New Jersey last night bound for Ohio -- where the actor lives. 

During the flight, we're told Dave "freaked out" and refused to put his seat belt on. Then -- according to sources -- Dave repeatedly walked into the c**kpit, asking how much longer the flight would be, and started grabbing the pilot's arms. 

Sources say the pilot determined Chappelle was a safety risk and diverted the plane to Pittsburgh. 

We're told Chappelle then checked into a nearby hotel for the night. Sources at the hotel tell us Dave has been telling hotel employees he wanted to rent a car to drive back to Ohio ... only he couldn't remember where he lived.

Chappelle was spotted wandering out of the hotel early this morning. 

A rep for Chappelle explains the incident to TMZ by saying Dave really needed to use the restroom -- he ate something that didn't sit well -- and the bathroom on the plane was "not the kind he needed." 


MY CUP A DI MOST ANNOYING FOCKING SONG FOR 2010 SO FAR............WEH UNU SEH

Olympic and world champion sprinter LaShawn Merritt has accepted a provisional suspension after testing positive for a banned drug, his lawyer said.

According to Thursday's release from lawyer Howard Jacobs, Merritt used an over-the-counter male enhancement product that contained substances that caused him to fail three successive tests between October and January.

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Merritt said he hopes his family, friends and sponsors will forgive him for making "a foolish, immature and egotistical mistake." The 400-meter runner will not compete until the case has been decided.

USA Track & Field CEO Doug Logan said in a release he is "disgusted by this entire episode."

"He has now put his entire career under a cloud and in the process made himself the object of jokes," Logan said. "In this day and age, a professional athlete should know better."

Merritt was recently notified that the presence of DHEA was the cause of his positive test. DHEA is short for dehydroepiandrosterone, which is a steroids precursor banned by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) Fifty-year-old Merlene Ottey became the oldest athlete to compete at the European Championships after anchoring Slovenia's 4x100 women's relay team yesterday.

Ottey, a naturalised Slovenian of Jamaican origin, surpassed the record previously held by 47-year-old French marathon runner Nicole Brakebusch-Leveque.

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Ottey said competing at 50 meant as much as any of the 29 medals she's won at major competitions since her debut in 1979.

"It's right up there with all the medals I have won," Ottey said. "I don't know if there's any athlete over 40 competing out here in sprinting, so to be competing at 50 is great."

Slovenia failed to reach today's final at Barcelona's Olympic stadium after they finished seventh with a time of 44.30 seconds. Ukraine won the heat in 43.24 seconds.

"My leg was difficult because I had the anchor leg," Ottey said. "Normally I catch people, but this time I couldn't catch anybody so it was difficult."

Ottey has competed at seven Olympic Games, starting with Moscow in 1980. She won bronze in the 200 in the 1992 Barcelona Games, when she was 32. But running now was providing new challenges.

"This is more than I ever got in my whole life," Ottey said. "I find the challenge great, it brings me greater joy to compete with people that are younger. (But) it didn't cross my mind (at 40) that I would still be running now. I thought I would retire."

The Hanover-born Ottey isn't going to stop either as she hopes to qualify for next year's World Championships in Daegu, South Korea, in the individual sprints or relay team. She hasn't ruled out the London 2012 Olympics either.

Ottey's secret? A mixture of nature and dedication, she figures.

"I guess it's my genes, and I like to run you know, so that's it," Ottey said.

Teammate Tina Murn hopes her illustrious colleague keeps running.

"It's an honour of course for all of us -- (it's) something special," Murn said.


IF U THINK KING KRAWNY IS SHOWING OFF HIS TATTOOS THINK AGAIN...THE TATTOOS R A WAY 2 DO THE CLENCHED FISTS WITHOUT QUESTIONS
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"The closed, or clenched fist" is, in the Illuminist Philosophy, the symbol of secrecy, dissimulation, and hermeticism. It veils and conceals secrets from the "profane" and the "vulgar" (the non-Illuminists). Interestingly, the meaning is the same in the canons of Buddhism.13. The clenched fist salute, or hand sign, is well-known in Freemasonry. The fists are both clenched, in allusion to one of the penalties of the obligation, which is to have both hands chopped off to the stumps.
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/sociopolitica/codex_magica/codex_magica28.htm
THE MASONIC CLAW
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The Masonic sign of Devil's claw was on an old Pyramids and later adapted by Freemasonry.
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http://lifetimejewelry.blogspot.com/2008/06/are-you-freemason-basic-history-of.html
Kartel if u r not in the Masonic Lodge but  just pretending to be, that's good enuf 4 me....Ppl tend 2 fear the unknown hence shun it. God hol' me up str8 so I am not afraidD.
What does it profit a man if he gain the world and yet lose his own soul?
Hip-Hop star Wyclef Jean will announce his bid for the President of Haiti, a source has confirmed with AllHipHop.com exclusively.

Sources close to Wyclef confirmed with AllHipHop.com that the rapper will announce his bid for the countrys highest office next Thursday, on August 5th.

The 37-year-old was born in Haiti, but immigrated to the United Statesmag-glass_10x10.gif at the age of 9-years-old, when he landed in Brooklyn, before settling in South Orange, New Jersey.

As a member of The Fugees and as a solo artist, Wyclef has sold millions of records, in addition to collaborating with artists like Paul Simon, Gloria Estefen, Destinys Child, Carlos Santana and others.

The rapper sprung into action on January 12th, when his native land was leveled by a 7.0 earthquake that left 300,000 people dead over a million others displaced.

Even prior to the earthquake, Wyclef Jeansmag-glass_10x10.gif Yele Haiti organization raised funds for the country, but after the deadly earthquake, the rapper helped raise over $10 million dollars in less than three months.

The rapper will make his official announcement just two days prior to the countrys August 7th deadline to submit his plan for running for President.

Analysts are predicting that Wyclef Jean will easily win the race with his financial connections, influence among the Haitian youth and his political influence around the world.

The news of his candidacy has stoked fears in opponents planning to run for the head office in November.

"I think if Wyclef is allowed to run he will have a straight victory," political leader and former presidential candidate Himmler Rebu told Reuters yesterday.

Jean, who maintained his status as a citizen of Haiti, was in the country yesterday, where he was preparing for his upcoming campaign.

The rapper/musician also has political clout in the country.

His uncle, Raymond Alcide Joseph, has been the Haitian ambassador to the United States since 2005 and helped Wyclefs drive to raise money and relief aid for victims of the massive earthquake.

Elections are slated for November 28th.



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SUM1 POSTED THIS AS A COMMENT N I THOUGHT IT NEEDED IT'S OWN TOPICnod.gif

anonymous said...
this was on the gleaner site and then pulled:I feel that Reggae Sumfest should use this divine sign in order to go through a spiritual as well as physical change to their show. This was the first time in 15 years that I did not attend Sumfest. As a victim of domestic abuse, I was both dismayed and shocked, that two individuals that have been confirmed abusers of woman were elevated and and being praised this year by organizers. Bounty Killer who will have go on trial for beating a police officer with an illegal firearm this Oct, was recently arrested for domestic abuse. Jah Cure a convicted rapist that still has not offered an official apology, As well as Chris Brown, convicted of beating his girlfriend last year. How can Sumfest Organizers and Bounty Killer's manager Sharon Burke continue to reward this kind of abusive behavior with awards and praises. Should we not treat criminals like they deserve to be treated, and shun them from our society. How can we grow a country of leaders if we do not show them that certain behavior should not be rewarded. The mud was a sign from The Lord, these persons who control our greatest resource "reggae" need to a cleansing, and need to step up to their responsibility to this country, not their pockets.

A rift within the Japanese reggae community, similar to the Gully/Gaza feud, has erupted. According to a Princeton professor who was hosted in Kingston last week, an artiste known as Minmi has allowed corporate Japan to use dancehall music in a TV advertisement with a popular transsexual, causing an outcry and a division among the fraternity.

The backlash resulted in Ryo the Skywalker the equivalent of Vybz Kartel in Jamaica splitting ways with Minmi, who is similar to Mavado. Both were longtime friends and collaborators prior to the incident.

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"He won't even perform with her at the same venue," noted Dr Noriko Manabe, a professor in the Department of Music at the prestigious Princeton University in the US who spoke at the University of West Indies (UWI) in Kingston last Tuesday.

She focused on the growth of the local reggae scene in Japan which forms part of her new book on western musical forms in Japan.

Japan is the second largest music market following the US, and currently Minmi charts at number one on the Reggae Singles Chart whilst Skywalker is at number six based on iTunes chart data.

In the advertisement, Ikko who is a transsexual, promoted a make-up line with dancehall music in the background. "Ikko has 320,000 fans on Mixi, the Japanese equivalent of Facebook, making her the third most popular entertainer," the professor stated.

Minmi sings on the track but the rhythm was done by a Jamaican producer, oblivious to the use of his track, she noted. The impact of the advertisement was mostly lost in translation even for Jamaicans living in Japan at the time, three years ago.

"Skywalker felt that Minmi sullied the aura of the dancehall scene," she said of him. "He told Minmi that he would cut personal ties with her as well as professional ones."

Minmi responded by criticising the dancehall community for not embracing reggae's tenets of freedom and liberation. The advertisement was eventually pulled from air in late 2007 following criticism by reggae community but its effect is still felt today, she said.

"Many dancehall fans were outraged that Japanese singer Minmi had used a reggae track ...and it signalled (to them) that some parts of the Japanese reggae scene were deteriorating into decadence."

She added that many Japanese artistes feared that Jamaicans would see the video on Youtube and conclude that the Japanese did not understand the roots of the culture. Jamaica is perceived as being the most homophobic nation in the western hemisphere, partly due to the anti-gay lyrics in dancehall.

The professor's dissertation discussed the process by which Western musical styles take root and evolve in Japan, it considered how notions of authenticity are redefined, how the Japanese language and aesthetic preferences affect musical style, and how Japanese artistes engage with artistes and audiences overseas. Her case studies involved hip hop, rock, rap, and reggae/dancehall.

WHAT recession? Party promoters are investing more than ever in holiday 'sessions' and patrons can't seem to get enough.

Indeed, despite the worse recession since the Great Depression, young partygoers are on a splurge this Emancipation holiday weekend. Armbands for both major series of parties -- Smirnoff Dream Weekend and Appleton Temptation Isle (ATI) -- in Negril were sold out by the middle of last week, at a minimum of $10,000 each. What's more is

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that hoteliers in Negril were expecting 100 per cent occupancy as some 15,000 persons, mostly party faithfuls from Kingston, were expected in that northwestern resort town for the long weekend.

Kamal Bankay, a promoter with Dream Team, organisers of Dream Weekend, marvelled at the overwhelming response to this year's event.

"It's not very often in Jamaica that people sell out a show for anything at all, but we are actually sold out," Bankay told Sunday Finance last week.

He noted that the economic spin-offs were far-reaching, providing a major boost to a town which, like many across the island, has been grappling with the ills of a struggling economy.

"There's a huge economic benefit for the town of Negril," said Bankay.

"Conservatively, the hotel spend will be about US$600 per person for the weekend... and take into account all the spin-off business that the area will be doing -- people need to eat, get toileteries, etc" he noted.

Dream Weekend offers a total of seven parties and patrons can either purchase the armband which offers entry into all, or select individual parties and pay an admission price for that event only. The gate prices for the individual parties at Dream Weekend range from $2,000 to $4,500. It's a similar concept for rival party ATI, which offers a total of seven parties with gate prices ranging from $1,500 to $4,500.

But patrons aren't spilling the cash for just music and liquor. They are treated to multi-demensional entertainment events, full of amenities as party promoters invest big to lure the masses year after year. From helicopters airlifting patrons and landing them in the nearby ocean on jet skis at Daydreams to exotic animals on display at Xtreme Wet and Wild, what's for sure is that party promoters will pull out all the stops.

"We added this dimension where we are trying to break through the box and invest a lot in these wow factors," revealed Bankay.

"For instance, at Daydreams there is going to be some fireworks which really brings a highlight moment to an event," he said, adding "Things like this, we are consistently investing in so that the patron experience is always improved."

NEW YORK (AP) The Black Eyed Peas have more proof of the ubiquity of I Gotta Feeling. Their No 1 hit has become the first song to reach the six million mark in digital downloads.

The milestone was announced yesterday and confirmed by Nielsen SoundScan. For the group's leader, will.i.am, the moment is about much more than the song.

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"We came out in '98 and our career, if you would look at it on chart, there's no dips in it," he said in a phone interview Thursday. "For our career to still be healthy and vibrant and doing things like six million downloads, it's pretty significant."

It's also significant, he said, in a time when illegal downloading is the norm.

"That means that they chose to support the group, support the art," he said. "God knows how many people listened to it online and didn't buy it, downloaded it for free and didn't think about it."

The upbeat song about good vibes was No 1 for 14 weeks; will.i.am said the reason it was so successful was because it gave people hope in a downward time.

"It's a positive, feel-good song at the time where there's question marks and uncertainty. People want to be reminded that it's going to be all right," he said.

The song was one of the hits from the group's multiplatinum The END, which was released last year. Although it is still on the charts, will.i.am said a new album, The Beginning, is almost finished and likely due at the end of the year.

"It symbolises growth, new beginnings and starts, fresh new perspective," he said.

Groundins

On July 22, 2010 Leahcim Semaj hosted on his Facebook newsfeed, a summary and the link to www.fastcompany.com. The article primarily referenced and reported the contents of a joint address at the new music seminar in New York City, by Tom Silverman, founder of Tommy Boy Records and Eric Garland CEO of Big Champagne, on the state of the International Music Industry.

These two gentlemen revealed some grim, startling statistics, as it relates to sales of albums released in 2009. Combining physical and digital sales, "Of the some hundred thousand albums released last year, seventeen thousand of them sold only one copy; more than eighty one thousand albums sold fewer than one hundred copies. In fact, just thirteen hundred albums sold over ten thousand copies."

Eric Garland claims that for physical sales alone, "Only two percent of new albums on sound scan sold over five thousand copies." Austin Kerr, the author of the article adds the comment "That's a sky diver's plummet from the golden era of the music industry."

While singles sales tapered off between the years 2000 and 2003, since then, there has been an almost eight fold cumulative increase in sales up to 2009. This is attributed to the fact that a higher percentage of the world's populations now ply this trade either as an amateur or professional.

Among the reasons given for the precipitous fall in album sales is that the traditional business model which centered on production and release of albums is outmoded and presently counter intuitive to the cultural disposition of contemporary music aficionados who mostly listen to compilations or a collection of songs.

Another reason cited, is that, this phenomenon is a direct by-product of a deliberate business strategy employed by iTunes to sell every song, as a single, for ninety nine cents; as opposed to a cost closer to one dollar ninety nine. The implication is that this would have encouraged higher album sales. Here is a good example how even with the impact of globalisation and the worldwide reach and impact of information technology, the music distribution trade continues to be skewed towards serving the interests of a few monopolistic trans-nationals, based mostly in North America and Europe.

In terms of future trends, Eric Garland made a telling statement that music consumers are using YouTube as their first option, and informs that it currently has the largest catalogue of on-demand music on the internet. The article concludes with the deduction that "traditional music media is going away", but ponders whether the music industry is ready for the change.

This unvarnished information gleaned, now warrants urgent, widespread analysis and debate within our local entertainment industry. Whereas, since the birth of our modern popular music, from Duke Reid and Clement Dodd in the sixties, through Sly and Robbie in the eighties, to the present, with companies like Jet Star and VP Records, our artistes and producers have challenged the status quo and bucked the commercial trends, in what was, back then, somewhat of an intuitive revolution in the business of marketing music. Now, finally, the rest of the world is catching up, as has been admitted in the comments above, by two big movers and shakers at the pinnacle of the industry. The promotion and sales of singles and compilations, as a main component of revenue intake for their sustenance, has always been a core feature of the Jamaican recording industry. In today's world, with universal access and growing popularity of iTunes and YouTube, the gross sales of physical CDs have been totally decimated, along with the record/manufacturing sector.

In order to compensate for this major loss of income, live performances, concerts and tours, have now become the predominant source of income for most prominent artistes and musicians. In this sense, the music industry has come full circle to the era which predates the invention of the phonogram and the manufacturing of records and tapes. But, that's a simplistic view, because during that time, the only means of hearing or seeing and artiste/ musician was through live performances. While the old music media is probably moribund, the new emerging media, made possible by the web-including YouTube and iTunes, gives most artistes, musicians and producers a much enhanced, dynamic advantage.

In this new dispensation, we must examine our state of readiness to maximize on our competitive advantage and potential, in the areas of online sales and performance touring. The industry has been turned on its head. Historically, tours were used mainly as a marketing tool to promote the sales of records. Today, released recordings are mainly to promote concert tours. With the enormous market penetration of the new media however, songs become an instant hit in many markets simultaneously; opening up new touring opportunities for our artistes in far flung places where traditional media might not have penetrated.

RECENTLY, two prominent music observers one from home the other from aboard, weighed in on the vexed issue of gay bashing by reggae performers.

Addressing the recent JAVAA (Jamaica Vintage Artistes and Affiliates) Reggae Hall of Fame induction ceremony, Clyde Mckenzie rendered it a stupid practice of local reggae acts to go on stage with anti-gay lyrics.

"The fact is," McKenzie declared, "putting certain things in the public space, helps to normalise them. It is a basic fact. In point of fact, I have said to my artistes (when I used to manage them), you see this thing where every day ounu go on stage and waging verbal attacks on homosexuals, is a stupid thing ounu doing."

The former publicist for dancehall's heavyweight Beenie Man explained: "I wasn't talking about the impact on their careers. I say, if you really dislike homosexuality so much, by talking about it so much in the public space, you are normalising that behaviour."

Perhaps the area of least similarity between Jamaican and Japanese reggae culture has to do with the reaction to homosexuality.

Another viewpoint came from Professor Noriko Manabe, who -- in the final segment of her comprehensive discourse on the influence of reggae on her native Japan -- addressed the controversial issue of homophobia in reggae and the Japanese response.

Bringing an end to her lengthy lecture of her country's conversion to reggae music at the Neville Hall Lecture Theatre (UWI, Mona) recently, Professor Manabe made it clear that she was simply laying out the circumstances as they unfolded in Japan.

"Over the last decade, gay activism, which has led to the cancellations of European tours for a number of Jamaican dancehall artistes, has made Japanese reggae fans aware of the presence of anti-gay lyrics in Jamaican dancehall. This has led to debates within the Japanese dancehall community on the extent to which aspects of Jamaican dancehall performance should be adopted in Japan when the social circumstances in Japan are different," Professor Manabe noted.

She noted that while Japan has its own stereotypes of gays and lesbians, it is rare to see violence or open hostility towards them. "Neither Shinto nor Japanese Buddhism places taboos on sexuality in the same ways that Judeo-Christian religions do, instead considering it in terms of pleasure rather than morality," she said.

"In fact," the music researcher added, "male homosexuality has a long history of acknowledgement in Japan; it has been associated with monks, kabuki actors, samurai, and the navy."

Quoting as her source, Mark McLelland, sociologist and cultural historian of Japan specialising in sexuality/gender theory, Professor Manabe stressed that it was not until the rise of the military government in the 1930s that homosexuality was strongly discouraged.

"Unlike in most Western countries," she cited, "gay sex has had little history of criminalisation in Japan. Today's modus operandi seems to be to respect the privacy of others, while not flaunting such behaviour in public."

Returning to the Japanese reggae fraternity, the music professor explained: "While I did not encounter gay bashing in the performances I personally attended, accounts from Japanese reggae performers and fans suggest that some Japanese performers do make homophobic comments. As one reggae fan noted, 'I have a transgender friend -- a woman in a man's body by virtue of hormones. He loves to dance, but sadly, I can't invite him along to a reggae event, because some stupid DJ or singer might say something that leaves him feeling uncomfortable."

She also shared the views of some artistes and that of one manager who told her that some of these guys (Japanese reggae artistes) became very immersed in Jamaican culture at an impressionable young age.

"They've bought the whole homophobic thing -- hook, line and sinker." As another manager noted, 'My charges mix with rudeboys when they're in Jamaica and return needing to be macho men.

"As a veteran artiste explained, "Some of these guys got into the reggae scene in the early 1990s, when Killamanjaro had established the sound system clash as the main event of the dancehall. And the clash, by definition, is a fight. They weren't there in the 80s, when it was more about listening to the music and watching the girls dance. So the clash defined what dancehall reggae means to them. Their macho stance and confrontational attitude, including gay bashing, is a reflection of the environment where they first experienced the scene."

However, she was quick to point out that "several performers openly disagree with such behaviour, finding it morally objectionable and outside the Japanese norm of respecting privacy. They prefer to associate reggae with a message of love and peace.

"Many of the artistes I spoke with were in between. As one well-known DJ said, 'I don't like gay men. I think homosexuality is unnatural. But I feel equally uncomfortable singing 'Death to the B----Boy.' It feels weird to focus so much attention on gays'." According to another well-known MC, 'There's no outside pressure not to say anything homophobic in Japan, but the audience doesn't want to hear it either. In Japan, people think it's a personal matter that's up to the individual, and it's not their concern.' His perception seems spot on; according to one female fan, 'Whenever I hear an MC make an anti-gay comment, I want to say, 'Shut up, play some tunes, and let us dance'."

Source: JamaicaObserver.com

PU&*Y PRINCIPLE 101....

July 28, 2010
Started By TBDGlamma5 Comments


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until.... u read this
There is a girl on zone*name withheld*  ..  a 'respectable' young lady.....who apparently nervous  had sex in the bathroom of someone's home....nervous , with a man she met for the  first timelc. Since some women who will give up their sex/vagina/pumpum/salt ting , anytime, anywhere, to anyonere...Please tell them what good p*ssy principle is all about reading

Record stores in decline


TAXES on CDs and other sound recordings in Jamaica ranked fifth highest in the region, according to International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) statistics, which at least one stakeholder said contributed to the silencing of local music.

Jamaica, compared with 12 regional territories, was higher than seven, including the USA, Canada, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, Paraguay and Venezuela, according to the IFPI in its tax statistics updated in May. Jamaica's tax on recording is 16.5 per cent, and countries with higher taxes included Argentina at 21 per cent, Brazil, between 15 to 18 per cent, Chile at 19 per cent and Peru at 19 per cent. The countries with the lowest taxes included the US, with a range between zero to 10.25 per cent and Canada at 5.0 per cent. The IFPI represents the recording industry worldwide with some 1400 members in 66 countries and affiliated industry associations in 45 countries.

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The elimination of general Consumption Tax (GCT) in Jamaica on music and related services would be a fillip for the ailing music industry, argued veteran singer and record producer Derrick Harriott.

"To boost the music business, I think they should eliminate completely the GCT or make it very small, to affect people," stated Harriott, who is also principal of Derrick Harriott's One Stop Records & Video, a fixture at the Twin Gates Plaza in St Andrew since 1973. "In all it would work out better cause they would buy more quantity."

The Observer yesterday tried unsuccessfully to get a comment from the Ministry of Culture.

Music stores have been hurt by piracy as illegal CDs sell for $100 whilst legal products are 20 times that price. But it isn't only CDs or DVDs which attract GCT, and other entertainment services are also hurting. Specifically, GCT data for 2009 indicates that there was an overall decline of 7.9 per cent in the gross sales of entertainment categories monitored by the Planning Institute of Jamaica. Major categories which showed declines in GCT collections included recording studios, down 37 per cent; theatre producers and entertainment services, down 30.7 per cent; and video productions, down 21.9 per cent, according to PIOJ-compiled data in its annual Economic and Social Survey 2009.

"Jamaicans love music; that is what keeps us going. It is like a medicine," Harriott said. "But some days I don't even sell one item."

In May, Harriott told the Observer that his sales were down by some 90 per cent year-on-year, which forced him to consider restructuring his business. Asked if he would establish an online store, he argued there would always be a market for CDs. People love to "feel" music, he reasoned.

In May, Mobile Music was the latest record store to exit a once-buoyant market. There are currently only four listings under music dealers (including Mobile Music) in the yellow pages of the latest phone book. Widening access to broadband Internet is enabling more persons to freely and illegally download music, movies and other copyright-protected digital content, which are often burnt onto CDs and DVDs and sold as bootlegs. The upshot being that legitimate businesses that once thrived on the sale of these products are now unable to compete on pricing and are being forced to shut their doors. Record Plaza, CD Outlet and Viewers Choice are among the popular stores that have closed in recent years.

THE Islamic Council of Jamaica is to investigate reports that controversial Muslim cleric Sheikh Abdullah al-Faisal, born Trevor William Forest, was putting together a group of Muslim followers on the island.

Council head Mustafa Muhammad said their information was that more than 70 followers are part of the breakaway group that does not form a part of the Islamic Council of Jamaica that represents, by their count, some 4,000 Muslims across the island.

 

"The information we are receiving is a cause for concern," he said, adding that their worry was due not to the group meeting but by what al-Faisal could teach the members.

"If it is Islam as it is to be taught, we have no problem. But if the teachings are contrary to what we believe therein lies the problem," Muhammad said.

Another concern, he noted, was that negative actions by the group could give other Muslims in Jamaica a bad name.

Al-Faisal was deported to Jamaica from Britain in 2007 for allegedly urging the killing of Americans, Hindus and Jews. He was at that time banned by the Islamic Council from preaching in any of their 10 mosques, after they met with him and discovered that his views differed from those of the local Muslim community. Al-Faisal subsequently left the island and returned in January when the Islamic Council opted to reinforce the ban on him.

Meanwhile, the Islamic Council is to meet today to discuss the plan presented as a solution to Jamaica's crime problem by one of its members Nedal Abunidal, who was accompanied by al-Faisal, on CVM TV's programme Direct.

Abunidal said on the programme that the 10-year plan, which he claimed received the blessing of the Council, would require that stakeholders and persons in the business community work together to provide 40,000 jobs to Jamaicans, some of them at risk, in the first year.

Muhammad now refutes the claim that the Council gave its stamp of approval to the plan. He said discussions were held with Abunidal on the plan but there was a breakdown in the talks and the Council decided it would have to be further reviewed before it could be endorsed. Muhammad was quick to add that their decision not to support the plan had nothing to do with al-Faisal's association with it.

AS Portmore continues its lobby for parish status, Mayor Keith Hinds is hoping to also have the boundaries of the municipality extended.

According to the mayor, if his plans to extend the municipality's lines are approved, adding more houses would not become an issue.

"Hence the idea of a 15th parish," he said. "If that happens, we would see an expansion of land mass and the moving of boundaries."

This would essentially also mean splitting the parish of St Catherine in two.

"St Catherine is big enough to accommodate two parishes," Hinds said, while inferring that the member of parliament for the adjoining communities would not be opposed to the idea.

"I'm sure my colleague on the other side would not mind giving up acres of land," he said.

According to the parish council's website, St Catherine is the fourth-largest parish in the island accounting for 460.4 miles or 10.8 per cent of Jamaica's land area.

Hinds said that already two bordering communities in the Bernard Lodge Division -- Caribbean Estates and Morris Meadows/Grange Lane -- were clamouring to become a part of Portmore.

He added that although these communities are not classified as being in Portmore, their residents use all the amenities the community offers, including supermarkets and petrol stations.

Hinds also said that while the St Catherine Parish Council benefited from Caribbean Estates' building fees, the Portmore Parish Council had to deal with its sewage needs. He also expressed concern about garbage being dumped along the roads in some areas which do not fall under his purview.

"St Catherine is really a big parish and I think having some of these areas turned into the parish of Portmore (is a good idea). That way we can properly monitor so we don't have a dump being formed on the boundaries of our city that we cannot do anything about," he said.

Hinds noted that the need for affordable housing was the catalyst for the many building projects in the community, including Westmeade II -- a settlement of 124 two-bedroom, one-bathroom single-storey detached units -- for which ground was broken last Thursday. The Housing Agency of Jamaica also said it plans to embark on a second phase of the Portmore Country Club, following the overwhelming success of the first project that was developed by West Indies Home Contractors. Portmore Country Club Two, which is awaiting Cabinet approval, will consist of 108 two-bedroom, 2 1/2-bathroom townhouse units on 995 square feet each in a gated community.

"We want to regularise and build out areas that accommodate housing solutions that are affordable to Jamaicans," Hinds said.

Westmeade II will cost potential homeowners $8 million per unit. Managing director of the Housing Agency of Jamaica, Joseph Shoucair said that while no cost had yet been determined, he expected one unit of Portmore Country Club II to cost in the region of $10million-$10.5 million.

Meanwhile, Hinds said that a more pressing concern for him was the water supply to accommodate the houses that are being built but that measures were being put in place to address that.

"There are pipe-laying exercises now being done and it is my understanding that they are now preparing to pipe more water into the communities of Portmore," he said.

Hinds also expects that extending the boundaries will mean more land to develop businesses in the area. However, while he makes his case for Portmore to become a parish, there are still some basic amenities that the municipality does not possess. These include a hospital for which ground was broken some years ago but to date nothing further has been done.

Hinds told the Sunday Observer that a major issue was that the promised $89 million approved to fund the running of the council in the beginning was never "put in place", but said he hoped that at the least some of the health facilities in the community would be upgraded.

"I'm looking forward to the hospital, which would be a private hospital and (I am) still looking forward to the clinics we have here being upgraded to a type five clinic because... We do want the type of services that every citizen of Jamaica is entitled to."

He eagerly accepted the proffered packet of biscuits and bottled water from his position on the floor where he had spent the night nursing angry bruises and a couple cracked ribs, where government-issued combat boots and guns allegedly found their mark.

The 36-year-old Tivoli Gardens resident was waking up to his first day inside a temporary detention centre in the capital.

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"I was so grateful when the police woman gave me the creme crackers and water that morning because I had gone without food the previous day," the market vendor recounted several weeks later as he sat outside his front yard, all the while keeping a close watch on the police and soldiers patrolling the streets.

His name has been withheld because he has since returned home and "fears retaliation by soldiers" whom he accused of beating him unconscious during the Tivoli incursion.

He was among hundreds of people detained under the State of Emergency initially called on May 23 to quell civil unrest which broke out in sections of the Corporate Area. The State of Emergency was subsequently extended to St Catherine on June 22 and eventually lifted on July 22 amid controversy.

But the lifting of the State of Emergency has not ended the "nightmare" for the Tivoli Gardens resident who insisted he would press ahead with plans to sue the Government "for the pain and suffering" he claimed he endured at the hands of the military.

"My lawyer is dealing with the matter, and I have the papers from my doctor," the man said recently.

Becase he feared giving is name, the Sunday Observer was unable to check his story with the military. But Dr George Lawsons' office confirmed that the man was being treated for broken ribs.

"Yes, he is a patient here. He came in after the State of Emergency," the receptionist said. "In fact I don't know if he is walking straight yet; when he first came in he was walking and bending down," the woman noted, adding that he was referred to a physiotherapist.

The Tivoli resident said after his beating, he was "peeing *lo**". He showed the Sunday Observer the scars on his back which showed that he had been severely beaten on a previous occasion.

"The police dem never beat me," he admitted, "but the soldiers them beat, kick and gun butt mi, all in front of my children some of the time. Yu fi si how dem duh mi back wid dem gun; dem all fracture mi ribs and beat mi till mi unconscious," he added.

"I hardly leave the house now because I am afraid dat them a guh see mi and lock mi up again, even though mi have mi release papers," he said, adding that he had not been back to sell his ground provisions in the Coronation Market since leaving the police lock up on May 27.

The father of four recalled how he was forcibly taken from his mother's house on May 24 after a joint/police military team stormed his barricaded community to serve an arrest warrant on alleged drug baron Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, who has since been extradited to the United States to face gun and drug-trafficking charges.

"When the shooting started, I took my wife and the three children (the fourth child lives in America) to my mother's house nearby for protection, because I knew that things were going to get bad," he said.

That afternoon, he recounted, a group of soldiers entered the house and separated the three men from the women and children. The soldiers took them outside the building and instructed them to lie face down on the ground. They were subsequently instructed to re-enter the house, but as he turned to comply "one soldier" allegedly kicked him in the stomach.

"It hurt so bad, that I could not stretch out mi foot for over an hour," the man recalled.

According to the resident, he endured several hours of interrogation and beatings that day.

"Them start beat mi from about 1:00 pm, and all after 4:00 pm mi still a get beating; them beat mi and stop, then start again" he said.

"At one point dem carry mi down the path way (walk way) and told me to run, but I said, "Lawd Jesas Christ, onnu tek mi away from mi family and a guh kill me! Then dem tek mi inside one house, and I heard one soldier sey, 'Mek wi dun him'. They told me to kneel, but a God save mi because mi nuh know whey mi get the strength from fi run. A run outta di house shouting, 'Lawd Jesas Christ a kill onnu a guh kill mi now'."

"Mi all run outta mi shorts and didn't even notice at first; dem beat mi and tear up mi clothes. It was only when I got back on the path way that I realised I was only wearing mi underpants," the man added.

A soldier, he said, blocked his headlong flight on the path way.

"Mi only hear when one soldier sey, 'Mi have him', and another one responded, 'Him drink Red Bull, bring him up ya mek mi si if him can fly'."

"The next thing I feel is one lick inna mi neck back, and mi knock out," the man told the Sunday Observer.

He said that when he regained consciousness darkness had fallen.

"It was after 10:00 pm when I woke up in my wife's lap; I was confused."

His confusion grew when he was forced to "crawl up into a truck" with scores of other men and taken to the Mobile Reserve Processing Centre where they were told to "kneel on the rough stones" outside the compound.

"We remained like that for about three or four hours before them bring us inside one cage up part of the building," he said.

Conditions inside the 'cage' left a lot to be desired, he said.

"First off, it was overcrowded, and when night came there was only room to sit. You want to stretch out, but you can't as you can only lean up," he remarked. "It was rough...and we would get wet because the place was so open.

"The food was not that good, even though I could not eat because I was in so much pain," he said. "We got biscuit and water the first morning, and dry food some days. It was not until the Thursday that we finally got some cooked food, but I still could not eat properly even then,"

He told the Sunday Observer that he was taken to the Kingston Public Hospital for treatment on the second day of his detention, but alleged that the officers who took him there were impatient and wanted to get him back to the detention centre as quickly as possible.

"The doctor told them that I needed an x-ray, but they did not want to wait, and so I was given some painkillers and taken back to detention," he alleged.

He said he was again taken to the hospital on Wednesday, and the doctor gave him a prescription and "a milk substance" to drink. "The doctor mentioned the need for an x-ray, but they said they could not wait," and so we left," the Tivoli man complained.

On Thursday, May 27 he was released without charge. "The Thursday night I heard them say, 'Whey di sick man deh, yu are free to go'," he said.

CHIEF of police in Manchester Superintendent Lascelles Taylor says there is hard evidence that some criminals and shady characters seek refuge in the parish and other "quiet places" when the "heat is on" in their locations.

For them, he has a simple message: "Don't come to Manchester."

He and his team reinforced the point during and in the aftermath of a recent major operation in communities around Mandeville.

More than 300 people were detained and "processed" during the two-day operation, with the great majority being speedily released. However, the police held on to 28 young men -- who were said to be "of interest" -- for further questioning and in some cases formal charges.

Taylor said "a number" of those 28 were found to be originally from crime hotspots, such as Western Kingston, Eastern Kingston, Clarendon, St Catherine, and Montego Bay, St James. In one case, a young man produced a "receipt" to show he had been detained and released during the late-May security force operation in Tivoli Gardens and the wider West Kingston.

"I tell him that Manchester is not a place for him to stay, so I send him off back to Kingston," said Taylor.

Two other men found hiding in Greenvale made their way to Mandeville on the basis of friendships they had formed with vendors who travel to Coronation Market in West Kingston on a weekly basis.

Lottery scammers from Montego Bay were also among those rounded up, he said.

Taylor said that in addition to major operations, the police were proactively seeking to prevent the movement of criminals into the parish through ongoing checks at border entry points, as well as routinely on the highways and byways.

"Anyone who come to Manchester and can't give an account as to their business here will have to explain to the police," he said. "If you live here, you must show us. If you have business here, you must show us. But you can't just come to Manchester for no reason at all... You have to explain yourself."

Taylor is urging citizens to co-operate with the police when they are stopped and searched, or temporarily inconvenienced.

"What we are trying to do is keep the community safe," he said, while he voiced satisfaction at what he said was the positive reaction from people in communities, such as Greenvale, following the recent operation.

Taylor believed police proactivity had borne dividends with people feeling "safer" even though there is much that remains to be done.

The murder figure for Manchester up to mid-July was 17 compared with 18 for the same period last year and Taylor noted that three of the murders emanated from gang feuding at a Trelawny construction project, at the Troy Bridge on the border between the two parishes, while a fourth was a mob killing of a crime suspect.

His biggest concern involves house break-ins and robberies, especially of laptop computers and cellphones in the large university, college and high school community in and around Mandeville in particular.

Taylor complained that the job of the police was made especially difficult because in some instances householders do not give enough thought to their own security.

In some cases, he said, owners of large houses -- often returned residents -- leave to go abroad without telling their neighbours or the police.

"When they return, they find their homes have been broken into. We are saying if you know you are going to travel, tell your neighbour, tell the police so we can be alert to the danger," he said.

Shocking video shows residents cheering on cops


OCHO RIOS, St Ann A shocking scene caught on video and showing citizens

cheering on three cops who were later arrested for beating and shooting a man to death, has drawn outrage.

 

Public Defender Earl Witter yesterday shouted barbarism! and the Police Federation hurled abominable at the cops who received an open show of support from residents of Buckfield in St Ann, for Thursday night's killing of Ian 'Ching Sing' Lloyd.

Minister of National Security Senator Dwight Nelson reacted with "disappointment and sorrow" at the news that an unarmed man was beaten and shot to death by a police party after he was subdued.

A private citizen videotaped the scene in which the cops rained blows on the man as he lay defenceless on the ground.

"Lethal force is a last resort. Was that a last resort? What patently the videography appears to portray is barbarism of the first and worst kind, and ironically, the support for it which appears to have come from citizens represents their endorsement of barbarism," Witter said.

In the video released to the news media, the police were heard getting verbal backing from onlookers who clamoured for the man to face vigilante justice.

The arrest of the officers, ordered by Police Commissioner Owen Ellington, who was also outraged, sparked a short-lived protest outside the police station in Ocho Rios where the lawmen were being held yesterday.

A group of about 25 residents who said they were against the arrest of the policemen, converged on the gates of the police station calling for the cops to be released.

"Where was the BSI when 'Ching Sing' a stab up and a bruk down people shops and homes? The video only show a little part a what go on. Why dem never video how him attack the woman and stab her up and how him mek after other people," said an angry man, who claimed he narrowly escaped the wrath of 'Ching Sing'.

The police said they went to apprehend Lloyd after he reportedly attacked Lovida Wilson with a knife, stabbing her multiple times in the neck, in her yard at Old Buckfield. She died on the spot. He reportedly attacked two other persons, injuring one of them.

"The man mek after me, too, after him stab up the woman and me have to jump a wall and cut up the whole a me foot. A whole heap a wrongs that youth do and the only time we have little peace ah when him deh a prison."

Residents said 'Ching Sing' had only returned from prison about two weeks ago after being convicted on house breaking and larceny charges. He was imprisoned for 18 months. They claim on several occasions 'Ching Sing' was caught red-handed breaking into people's houses and businesses.

"A lot a time he broke into shops in the market; he was no saint. It's just unfortunate that the police shoot him that way, still, but a whole heap a people him mek suffer and if the police never shoot him, he woulda stab them up and all kill one a them," a woman, who claimed she was on the scene, told the Sunday Observer.

Residents claim the man had stabbed at the police several times with a piece of broken bottle he had in his hand. They said he was shot after he threw the bottle at the police.

But, despite the claims by the residents and support for the police, the dead man's sister Opal believes her brother should have had his day in court. She claimed the police had always been after him and that he was shot once before in his leg by cops.

"Regardless of what he did, yes, me admit that him shouldn't stab up the woman and kill her, but the police dem wicked too. Dem should carry him in and make the law decide; if him fi go a prison and dead in prison, make him go prison and dead there, don't kill him."

Opal said her family was traumatised by the video footage which showed the inhumane manner in which their relative was dealt with by the police.

Public Defender Witter said the incident brought into sharp focus the abuse of the Constabulary's use of force and use of firearms policy. He said his office had requested a copy of the video footage from the police as it intends to launch a probe into the incident.

Witter also made it clear that despite the revealing footage the cops involved should be treated fairly.

"They are not to be condemned by public opinion or talk show hosts or people on their verandahs. They must be given their day in court, which ironically, the dead man wasn't," he said.

Head of the Police Federation Sergeant Raymond Wilson also hit out at the actions of his colleagues, describing them as "abominable".

"Speedy actions must be taken to deal with the officers whose actions have undermined and crippled the institution of the Jamaica Constabulary Force," Wilson said in a release yesterday. "Members who engage in such acts against humanity will not be sheltered by the Police Federation."

Meanwhile, executive director for Jamaicans for Justice, Carolyn Gomes, said she was not surprised at the behaviour of the police and said the incident demonstrated the level of brutality by the security forces that her group had been highlighting for the past 11 years.

And the National Democratic Movement, in a release, commended what it said was the quick and decisive action of the commissioner in ordering the arrest of the policemen involved.

Security Minister Nelson also hailed the courage of the citizen who videotaped the incident.

"This is the refreshing kind of courage and positive attitude that we have been encouraging to bring the lawless in and out of the Jamaica Constabulary Force to book," he stressed.

The minister also welcomed news that Commissioner of Police Owen Ellington has instructed that the policemen involved in the incident be apprehended.

"Let the chips fall where they may," declared Senator Nelson.


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R.I.P. BUGA MINOTT blessings
STEPH JONESS....


SWEET, KIM POSSIBLE... DI WHOLE A DI BLEACHERS DEM ROLL OUT....TEK A PAGE....*. thxSWEET.....pc.gif

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GOVERNMENT yesterday signed documents to seal the divestment of the final three sugar estates held by the Sugar Corporation of Jamaica (SCJ) Monymusk, Bernard Lodge and Frome to the Chinese company Complant.

"Notwithstanding, in more recent times, a real concerted effort to divest the industry did not succeed, we felt that it was something we needed to pursue," Prime Minister Bruce Golding said yesterday at the Jamaica House signing of the deal between a delegation from Complan and Government representatives.
Government's push two years ago to sell the SCJ estates to the Brazilian company, Infinity Bio-Energy fell flat in the face of the worldwide economic decline.Agriculture Minister Christopher Tufton made it clear that the signing was two-fold, one for the purchase and lease of assets owned by SCJ, and the other to conduct a feasibility study for the construction of a sugar refinery and ethanol facility.The prime minister contended that Chinese investors viewed investment projects in a different way from other foreign investors.
BRUCE+PEN= DISASTER...THAT'S NEVER GUD, USUALLY MEANS ANOTHER ASSET GONE.sigh


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ydads Nyamtion, wipe up u mout yes lol but wait wha di fake ''wannabe'' accident @ di start fa? lol an a whey u find dem eidiat yeye glass deh nerd?


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Will the real Mrs. Palmer plz stand up. Sophie Kartel divorce n married u? Sm1 4got 2 issue that memo.

Constance SeepeHi Mrs Palmer smile.gif

6 hours ago
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Shorty Palmer mi fb profile diz mi new pc got it look suh



Shorty Palmer he a d best baby daddy fi mi baby fi me baby come b my baby fada Adidja Vybz Kartel Palmer


PRE-TATTOOS N ALL HER HAIR...AAAH!!!
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FACE TRAUMA
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BERGER COMMERCIAL
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PHOTOSHOP CS4..SILKY SMOOTH
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lmao


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UNDER THE BRIDGE OR AT THE END OF A RAINBOW  U WILL FIND A TROLL OR A LEPRECAUN N COUPLE A DEM PPL HERElol.

Pic 1...I was hoping those were tattoos. A mosquito bite u so or u jump nuff barb wire fencehmm.U need likkle Chalomine cream or Palmer's Cocoa butternod.gif. U r only allowed 2 wear pants or boots, dat outfit #FAIL.

Pic 3n4...Bounty u n Bridges a audition fi new video?wtf Mi a try figure out dah mermaid suit deh but it naa work fi me ataal. U just look like a drape inna Prince house...lol

Pic 5...lc Clearly, u lack a mirror or u hav no frenssigh. Body magic, a comforter, 2 beach towel summen need fi trow ova u. A u say confidence n high self esteem...

Pic 6...Go-go purple Rangerlmao...yuh blue eyeshadow match u belt doah...a grape on the dance floorrl

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UNNO REALLY N CHOOLY TEK DIS BRACES TING A LIKKLE BIT TOO FAR.....

U MOUT MASH UP MUM... ONE MORE TING... U REALLY GUH OUT WID ELE SUH?? lc


SPICE
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STACIOUS
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TIFA
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D'ANGEL
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CECILE
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THIS IS THE STAIN DEM FAMILY...YES SHERLOCK PPL COME CUSS ME NOWre...MI N MY MAN NUFFY INNA PEARLS N LIPSTICKlc...MI N MY MAN NUFFI A FIGHT OVER WHO FINISH THE NADINOLAlc...MI AN MY MAN NUFFI A FIGHT OVER MY LACE BLOUSElc...IT NOT RIGHT!!cs ...WHERE R THE REAL MEN IN DANCEHALL?hmm WEH DEM GONE...MI COUNTRY A DISAPPEAR INNA VANITY N LUSTsad ....DEM A CUSS SEH BRUCE A SELL OUT DI COUNTRY WEN NUFF A DEM A SELL OUT DEMSELF...lc

SLOANE THIS IS THE REMIX....

July 31, 2010
Started By TBDGlamma0 Comments


SD.gif DJ image aguilucho144

WHO AM I???....MOMENT OF TRUTH........
RIDDLE ME DAT , RIDDLE ME DIS...WHICH DJ GAVE MR. S. A KISS?? YESSIRRRR....JUDGEMENT DAYnod.gifwhis



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The tribute to Sugar Minott
Little John is determined to finish the song even as Triston reaches 4 the mic.
Tragicomedy at its best. Theatre of the absurd. Let's borrow the dreaded Chat! Red X and plaster it over that segment. Can you imagine, grown men -- veterans in the business -- jostling for one microphone and even appearing to elbow off each other, while professing to be paying respect to the late 'Bugga' Minott.
We expected that Jimmy Riley, Triston Palmer, Little John, Tony Tuff and Bongo Herman would have all been on stage at the same time in a show of unity, singing some of Sugar's greatest hits, but not so. Jimmy Riley -- ever the dapper -- strolled on first, did a nursery rhyme song that Sugar hardly ever sang and exited. Then the best of the tribute came on in the form of an angelic-white attired Bongo Herman doing Mr DC. And after that, the tribute just descended.
Word is that the tribute cost a cool $400,000.00. Still don't know whether to laugh or cry.
They say u get older n wiser, they r certainly older but not behaving wiserlc. How can grown men be fighting, almost elbowing each other off the stage while giving tribute 2 a man who did so much 4 reggae musicsigh. Their behaviour was appalling considering this was a time 4 unity, 2 pay their respects, not 2 act like crabs in a barrel pity.


PNP's Ian Hayles
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JLP's Shahine Robinson
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THE ruling Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) and the Opposition People's National Party (PNP) have agreed to bury the dual citizenship hatchet, to eliminate the need for "costly" by-election
Sources said last night that the parties had reached a deal that would end the legal battles over the alleged dual citizenship of two of their parliamentarians.The agreement, according to the source, is that the JLP would drop its Supreme Court bid to dethrone the PNP's Ian Hayles as MP for the West Hanover constituency, and in return, the PNP would not contest any pending by-election in the North East St Ann constituency from which the JLP's Shahine Robinson was disqualified by the Supreme Court on May 31.
"I have heard of it," Darryl Vaz said, "but I have seen no document to support what I have heard. No party officer has received such a document."
Both Hayles and Robinson are said to have possessed United States citizenship on nomination day in August 2007, shortly before the September 3 general elections.

hmm...POLITRICKS , OF COURSE WORK OUT SUMMEN THAT BOTH PARTIES CAN BENEFIT. AFTER ALL THAT'S HOW THE COUNTRY HAS BEEN RUN 4 DECADESre. JAMAICA ONLY HAS 2 PARTIES IN ELECTION, AFTER THAT BOTH HAVE DRINKS N DINE 2GETHER 2 LAAF AT THE PPL N PLAN HOW 2 SCREW US 2GETHERlc.


Bauxite revival - 629 get jobs
Click image to view full size editorial cartoon


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WINDALCO's aluminium refinery in Ewarton, St Catherine, was reopened yesterday -- a year and four months after it was forced to close in the face of a global recession which caused a slump in the demand for the product.

The reopening of the bauxite plant is expected to boost the economy of Ewarton, Linstead, and surrounding communities in St Catherine, as in addition to the direct employment of 629 people, dozens of others are expected to benefit from the plant's operation.
Pearnell Charles u dat? I c u still doing u thing. U nuff like the black pepper n salt hairstyle u rocking, u skunk hairdo really living on though ...thru Clairol or Bigen? (Not a fan)
But I hav a big smile on my face right nowD, I like 2 c progress in my countrynod.gif...Mi luv it!!!clap..629 mouths getting fed n their families getting a gap filledelmo. Happy 2 c this decision made, now unu need 2 put back the train lines in effect...then it's smoother sailing.yay

BAR-BEE DON'T MOVE!!

July 31, 2010
Started By TBDGlamma0 Comments


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Princess Bar-bee, why u n ure family dem love create havoc on di ppl dem block solc. Bronx police luv run een eno. War 2day bosom buddies 2morosigh. 1 question though...why u uncle draw gun pon u as u come tru the doorhmm. Mi hear say as u come in the man just say "ALL U"!! *click click* n  (select machine).  I know Beenie man pay ure rent n bills every month  in advancenod.gif so I don't think is  more money him cudda wanthmm...Karma nuh romp fi kick u up eeee? Just the other day u call police pon yuh bredda n expose him likkle green biznizlc. Mek di man a run up n down like a headless fowl...with a sister like u, who needs enemies.sigh



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The University of the West Indies (UWI) MonaCampushas acquired the 49 per cent shares previously held by the Breakfast Club Limited in Universal Media Company which operates NewsTalk 93 FM.

A statement from the University of the West Indies Mona said the institution is now the sole ownerofUniversalMedia Company Limited.

Under the new arrangement, the management structure and programmes of NewsTalk 93 FM are currently being evaluated and the University of the West Indies said it will make further announcements regarding the changes to be implemented.


http://go-jamaica.com/news/read_article.php?id=21283


I don't like how that sound...no sir I don't *fear in my eyes*nervouscrying

EMANCIPATION DAY COMING UP, THAT DOESN'T APPLY 2 JAMAICA

Click image to view full size editorial cartoon
EVEN as the country gets ready to celebrate Emancipation Day next Monday, some pastors in western Jamaica are concerned that the society is still shackled by a depraved mentality that has manifested itself in skin bleaching, widespread corruption in public life and other negative phenomena.
A society is not truly emancipated if it has to resort to a State of Emergency, because with God as the Master there would be freedom from crime and violence because there would be enough fear in your heart for God, said Abu Ibrahiim of the Montego Bay Masjiid.
While the State of Emergency was probably necessary to flush out gunmen, the police abused their power and trampled on the rights of the people, he said. That is not freedom; it reminds me of the Bucky Master (slavery) days, he stressed.

Dorrett Blake, the pastor of the Sold Out Ministries, also based in Montego Bay, believes that many in the society are enslaved mentally. Many of us are enslaved to "Me. We focus on ourselves and pay little or no attention to the poor and the oppressed. We have become oblivious to the injustice around us and have become slaves to our own desires and comfort, she stressed.

I CONCUR...EMANCIPATION IS FREEDOM. JAMAICA IS NOT FREE WE R ENSLAVED BY THE GOVT. WRONG DESIRES, COVETOUSNESS N GREED.sad


DSC_0140.jpginformer no tittylol
DSC_0456.jpgDSC_0182.jpginformer Pregnant??hmm
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SOME SEROSEE TEA, SINKLE BIBLE N LIKKLE SAUCIPERRILLA, SM PPL NEED WASH OUT. A DEM SAY BARE AS U DARE BUT IF U HAV A BEER BELLY "DON'T U DARE" WEAR THAT KINDA BATHING SUIT. THAT GIRL IN PIC 3 I HOPE SHE WASN'T DRINKING CUZ I ASSUME SHE IS PREGNANT...lc

Man stabs woman to death, gets killed
Published: Saturday | July 31, 2010 1 Comment and 0 Reactions
A man who stabbed a woman to death after accusing her of owing him money was shot and killed by the Ocho Rios police after attacking the lawmen with stones on Thursday.

Another woman was stabbed by the alleged killer who also damaged a police service vehicle.

The dead woman has been identified as Loveta Wilson, of Ocho Rios. She is said to have been in her late 40s.

The man has been identified as Ian Lloyd, 29, of Pineapple Place, Ocho Rios. Lloyd was reportedly recently released from jail.

Reports are that shortly before one oclock, Lloyd accosted Wilson in Buckfield, Ocho Rios, after previously accusing her of owing him money. An argument developed and Lloyd allegedly drew a knife and stabbed Wilson several times over the body. She died on the spot.

Another woman who was with Wilson was also wounded by the attacker and was treated at the St Anns Bay Hospital and released. A man who was also attacked by Lloyd was forced to use stones to ward off the attacker before managing to escape.

The police were called and, when accosted, Lloyd allegedly attacked the lawmen with stones, hitting three of them and damaging a police vehicle in the process. The police reportedly fired a shot which caught Lloyd.

He was taken to the St Anns Bay Hospital where he was pronounced dead

lc

DONIA LETS TALK......

July 30, 2010
Started By TBDGlamma7 Comments

Sheldon..... Tell mi babes....

A who dem ya..???hmm
WHEN HE IS REFERRING TO STINK BRET PRINCESS IS HE TALKIN PRINCESS K??? HMMM
DI QUEEN YOU AH TALK IS IT DI GIRL PIC DATS POST TODEH... ANSA WE OR TWEET ITgrr

DONIA TWEETS....

AIDONIAJOP why some girls waan get treted like wife and dem deh farrrrr from dat?lol....dnt understand.....lol....luuuuu 
about 5 hours ago from web 

AIDONIAJOP i need a queen not a princess...lol 
about 2 hours ago from web 

AIDONIAJOP NEEDS A QUEEEEEEN......NOOOOOOOOO PRINCESS with stinkbreath no interest...lol 
about 2 hours ago from web 

AIDONIAJOP some girls love talk bout dem ole and seh dem a goodas and seh dem man naa lef....me seh me great me queen naa go lef...she likes wat i got
hmm Talk to me baby..... meck we know a who nuhwinkwink
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