There is none better than the PPP/C when it comes to propaganda

Dear Editor,

I read the President’s Mash Day address to the nation, and I reeled.  The President spoke of ‘One Guyana’ in one gasp, then proceeded to trot out an enemies list, like an insecure Nixon.  The President’s Mash message found space to spotlight “selfish agenda, biasness, perception, propaganda, and feelings.”  I readily identify with perception, because the governance environment perpetrated by the President overflows with blatant wrongs, what fails minimal honesty and integrity tests.  Any society that is to progress, by learning from its errors and failures, will only do so via the hearts of those still capable of perception, and not willing to swallow whatever lies and distortions come down from government and leaders. It may not have registered with Guyana’s President, but what he lashed out with in his conclusion about others, is in and of itself based on perception, and housing the same “biasness” that he accuses others of on such a grand day.

Speaking for myself, the President knows, or his people should have told him, there are a few in this land who seek nothing, want nothing, and will accept nothing.  On the issue of “propaganda” surely the nation’s young leader jests, since there is no group, no machinery, no presence in this country (maybe in the region) that is better than the PPP/C Government and its leaders and agents in the propaganda department.  In Guyana, under the PPP/C and his government, propaganda is national culture, propaganda is national religion, and propaganda is national pastime.  It is telling that the President beholds his propaganda as scripture, but the truths of others as the handbook of the devil.  In the area of “feelings” driven by whatever the President conjures in the confines of his mind, I contend that the President has them, too.  I am sure he would agree that such is still a constitutional right in Guyana, which should not be denied to any, notwithstanding his views to the contrary, meaning that unless they reconcile with his government’s way of life, they are forbidden.

Incredibly, the President was proud to pat himself on the back about being receptive to “constructive criticism.”  I have news for the President: he does not have a monopoly on interpretations of what constitutes “constructive criticism.”  Stated differently, what is and what isn’t; not because the former pleases him, and the latter denounces.  Given these hollow and artificial constructs of Guyana’s President, I have an invitation for him, something challenging.  Give me something to go on, something honest, something ethical, something clean and unsullied, and I am willing to run through any fire, to attest to its national good and lasting benefits for all.  Nothing would give more satisfaction.  My invitation stands. I close this out.  It is most unfortunate, a source of sorrow, and some consternation, that the President chose Mash Day to snipe and “gripe” (to use his word) at those who want a better, cleaner Guyana.  That which is done not with shovel and wheelbarrow, but a clean conscience and record that speaks volumes.

Sincerely,

GHK Lall