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Tuesday, July 08, 2025

Stop the Madness! Political Oversight Isn’t a Crime — It’s a Duty”

This so-called commentary posted on St Lucia News Online is not only embarrassing in its logic, it's an insult to the intelligence of Saint Lucians. Let’s call this what it is — propaganda masquerading as public concern by so called "Caribbean Writers".

Let’s tear into this foolishness point by point:

1. "Political sabotage"? Really?
Since when is showing up at a construction site — a publicly funded site — considered sabotage? Is the public no longer allowed to question delays, check progress, or challenge the government on transparency? If Allen Chastanet is trespassing, say so and let the law handle it — don’t inflate it into some Mission Impossible movie plot.

2. "Dangerous escalation"? From what — visiting sites? Asking questions?
This article is riddled with fear-mongering, claiming Chastanet is "jeopardizing public safety." How exactly? With a camera crew and some tough questions? The real danger here is the suggestion that political leaders must stay silent or risk being branded enemies of the state.

3. “Strengthen security to stop him”?
This recommendation is laughable. We’re talking about public infrastructure funded by taxpayers. Is the government now building bunkers instead of hospitals? If these projects are so sensitive that an opposition leader showing up is a threat, what are you really hiding?

4. Irony, thy name is this article.
To accuse Chastanet of being desperate because he’s criticizing projects his government started or failed to finish — isn’t that just normal political accountability? Or is the Labour Party now allergic to scrutiny?

5. “This is not about politics.”
Please. This entire piece is dripping with partisanship. It reads more like a press release from a ruling party spin doctor than a credible piece of journalism. The dramatic language, the hollow praise of the government, and the complete absence of counterpoints scream bias.

 Bottom Line:

This isn’t journalism. It’s an attempt to paint legitimate political critique as terrorism. If a sitting opposition leader showing up to inspect government work is now "sabotage," then democracy itself is under threat — not from Chastanet, but from the authors of this nonsense.

Security shouldn’t be used as a shield to block public inquiry. If your projects are sound, let them stand up to scrutiny. If they’re not — well, no amount of fences and cameras will save you from public judgment.

Let’s keep our eyes on real sabotage: corruption, incompetence, and the silencing of dissent.

Let the people decide who’s desperate — we know the smell of fear when we see it in print.

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