Thursday, March 3, 2011

Jamaica's 7 National Heroes

There are currently 7 national heroes in Jamaica.  The first set of National Heroes were accorded that designation in 1965, three years after the island gained its independence from Great Britain. They were Marcus Mosiah Garvey, Paul Bogle, George William Gordon, Norman Washington Manley and William Alexander Bustamante.  Samuel “Sam” Sharpe was designated a national Hero in 1975, and the sole female heroine, Nanny of the Maroons, also known as Granny Nanny, was given the honor in 1976.

There is a park dedicated to them, namely, The National Heroes Park in Kingston.  It was known originally as Kingston Race Course and was first opened in 1783 as a race track.  Sometime around 1905, it was made into a public park and named George VI Memorial Park in honor of King George VI.  When Jamaica gained its independence in 1962 the Park was given its present name.

Here are the 7 national heroes of Jamaica...
 
PAUL BOGLE
Birth date unknown - died 1865



Paul Bogle, a Baptist Deacon was generally regarded as a peaceful man who shunned violence. He believed in the teachings of the Bible, endorsing the principles of charity and endurance. Yet he was also a leader and organizer who knew well the terrains of the land and had spent time in educating and training his followers. He lived in St. Thomas and led the Morant Bay Rebellion in 1865.  


GEORGE WILLIAM GORDON
1820 - 1865



George William Gordon was a free colored land owner and an associate of Bogle. As a member of the House of Parliament, he used his position to highlight the sufferings of the people and to make a plea for changes. The Morant Bay Rebellion and the resultant deaths of Bogle and Gordon precipitated the beginning of a new era in Jamaica’s development. The British government became compelled to make changes including outstanding reforms in education, health, local government, banking and infrastructure.


NANNY
lived and died in Nanny Town



Nanny of the Maroons stands out in history as the only female among Jamaica’s national heroes. She possessed that fierce fighting spirit generally associated with the courage of men. In fact, Nanny is described as a fearless Asante warrior who used militarist techniques to foul and beguile the English. Like the heroes of the pre Independence era, Nanny too met her untimely death at the instigation of the English sometime around 1734. Yet, the spirit of Nanny of the Maroons remains today as a symbol of that strong desire that will never yield to captivity. 


SAMUEL SHARPE
1801 - 1832



‘Daddy’ Sam Sharpe, as he was affectionately called was to carry on the Resistance against slavery effecting at the young age of 31, the most outstanding Slave Rebellion in Jamaica’s history. Sharpe, an educated town slave, was a preacher and spokesman. Intelligent and sharp, he followed the developments of the abolition movement by reading discarded local and foreign papers and was able to advise his followers. Sharpe was tired of slavery, spent months in strategic planning, educating the slaves and traveling from estate to estate in secret meetings at nights, igniting the slaves with inspiring messages of hope of freedom. The 1831 Christmas Rebellion started in St. James and spread throughout the entire island. The Rebellion started on December 28 and lasted 8 days. Sam Sharpe was eventually captured and hung at the Parade in Montego Bay (now renamed Sam Sharpe Square). On August 28, 1833 slavery was abolished and the System of Apprenticeship instituted, allowing for the total freedom of slaves in the next 4-6 years. On August 1, 1938 the Apprenticeship System ended granting full freedom to the slaves. 


SIR ALEXANDER BUSTAMANTE
1884 - 1977



Alexander Bustamante was an aggressive, outspoken young man who understood the dynamics of labor relations. A charismatic and impressive speaker, he used the media to criticize the prevailing political system and its attendant social problems. He started the Industrial Trade Union in 1938 and was jailed for 17 moths following labor riots. He became Jamaica’s first Chief Minister, a position he held until 1954, being knighted that same year by the queen. On August 6, 1962 Jamaica was granted full independence. At the first session of Parliament, Bustamante received the Instruments of Independence from the queen’s representative, Princess Margaret. This time in Jamaica’s history drastic changes were heralded, not by bloodshed but by peaceful negotiations.  


NORMAN WASHINGTON MANLEY
1893 - 1969



Norman Washington Manley founded the People’s National Party which later was tied to the Trade Union Congress and the N.W. U. Together with Bustamante, their efforts resulted in the New Constitution of 1944 granting full Adult Suffrage. In 1955 Manley was elected Chief Minister. The 400 year British Rule, invoking slavery, deculturisation, uprising and bloodshed was not at an end. 


 MARCUS MOSIAH GARVEY
1887 - 1940



Marcus Mosiah Garvey stands out in history as one who was greatly committed to the concept of the Emancipation of minds. Garvey who was born in St. Ann became famous worldwide as a leader who was courageous and eloquent in his call for improvement for Blacks. He sought the unification of all Blacks through the establishment of the United Negro Improvement Association and spoke out against economic exploitation and cultural denigration. He spent many years in the United States pursuing his goal of Black Unification.

Hedonism II in Jamaica is having a EC reunion!

Coming out of Negril Jamaica is the announcement of their entertainment coordinator reunion week this coming September 4th to the 11th, 2011.  This is a chance for all ex-EC's to reunite and party for a week at Hedonism II off the clock.  Does that mean they'll end up in their birthday suits since they're not working?  :-)

(click to enlarge)

Hedo II has had it's fair share of legendary EC's over the years.  BLT, Buffy, Rose, The "Sizzler", Ashley and others.  For those of you who've gone, did you have favorites? 



Wednesday, March 2, 2011

A new website will show you a hotel rooms view!




Here's a cool new website, www.room77.com, (awesome name too) that will allow people to see the views of any hotel room using Google's technology.  Have you ever booked a room and when you arrive you're staring at a parking garage or something boring?   Not anymore.


Room77 has it's web site that's just launching plus an I-Phone app you can download and view the same room shots.  Currently, they cover just larger hotels in major cities here in the US such as New York, Honolulu, Chicago and Washington D.C.   They plan on expanding as they grow to cover more hotels in more areas. 

How did they get so many images for their site?   The company's small staff used technology - Google Earth-style satellite technology that takes into account latitude, longitude and altitude - as opposed to the labor-intensive practice of hiring photographers to travel the USA and rent hundreds of thousands of rooms.

Police bust guys in a Hotel Prostitution sting

Police in Joliet, IL, Google Map, a 'burb' of Chicago, got calls from local hotel managers complaining of suspected prostitution in their hotel rooms.  So what did the police do?  They ran ads in www.backpage.com and other social networking sites claiming, "Busty blue eye Nikki" was in town and ready for sexy service.

 (ads like these resulted in another 60 calls the cops couldn't catch)
(click to enlarge)

Within minutes of the ads going live undercover female police officers started getting calls where they started negotiating sexual acts and prices with there would be "customers."  The sting resulted in 34 official arrest at 5 different area hotels.   22 of the arrests (12 on felony charges and 10 on misdemeanor prostitution charges) were from prostitution or pimping while the other 12 were from various other charges inducing juvenile pimping and possession of a gram of heroin.  Reports also indicate police seized $2,000 and 11 cell phones from the alleged solicitors.  Ten vehicles were also impounded. 

The first mistake these callers made were to actually negotiate the acts and prices over the phone.  Never talk about actual sex acts, and a true escort never will either.  In fact they will most likely start to play dumb if you do.  Sex itself is not illegal, only the act of money in exchange for the sex.

(a sample ad from backpage)

If you ever make the phone call then meet the lady they also say the 'legit' escorts will ask you to show them your manhood in order to prove to them you're not a cop.  Also, they might ask you to touch their breasts as another test.  You could also ask them to show you their breasts so you can take one picture of them before any talks of acts or prices come up, this would 99% validate them as not an officer. 

Either way, I don't condone prostitution but at the same time, I don't like the stings nabbing people who are willingly exchanging services, so long as they do it safely. 

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

DR Nights - a companion pictorial review!

This DR Nights in the Dominican Republic is one wild place.  It's like Hedonism II in Jamaica, but the all inclusive portion of it, includes WOMEN!   That's the crazy concept behind the Caribbean's #1 Erotic Escort Vacation detestation.   Why go to another resort if you're single when you got places like this out here?  This is like going to Mardi Gras - pre-beaded!   You're gonna score.


Plus the resort is really nice.  You get all you can eat food.  A ton of top shelf liqueur.  And a beautiful resort in the Caribbean where you party poolside with drinks in hand, a cigar in the tray and hot women galore!


Should you get bored you can also have the resort set you up on one of several golf courses, or you can go deep sea fishing in the Caribbean!    The resort itself has nightly shows and entertainment, they even have a nightclub on premises so perhaps you'll find yourself never even leaving the resort during your stay, some of these ladies would make most guys stick around.


So check out DR Nights for specials starting at just $997. 

Buy a cool looking scuba watch for 82% off it's list price!

I've been doing a lot of scuba posting lately, I guess I'm feeling the need to slip back into the ocean.  When you are scuba diving you need the best equipment.  Equipment that's solid and mostly, relivable.  You're life depends on it.  Amazon has this big clunker of a watch on sale for $179.99 and it's list price is $995!   Does it REALLY retail for $995, probably not, but at $179.99 it is a deal.



Here's the Amazon write-up:  Broad and encompassing, the Invicta Men's Subaqua Collection Watch is a strikingly sporty timepiece born of superior elements.  From the thick stainless steel case to the chunky black polyurethane band with buckle clasp, quality abounds in distinctive arrays.  The large round unidirectional stainless steel bezel features raised Arabic numerals while the black analog dial incorporates them along a printed concave silver ring.  

(it ships free too!)

Luminous silver-toned baton markers and hands sweep about from within a protective flame-fusion crystal window.  A date window aperture is also enclosed at the three o'clock position for added appeal. For the serious diver, the Invicta boasts Swiss quartz movement and a bruising water-resistance depth of 1,640 feet (500 meters), ensuring durable operation at seemingly unfathomable depths.

All Invicta watches sold by Amazon.com are covered by a one-year manufacturer's warranty and are eligible for a free upgrade to the Invicta Platinum Warranty Plan.

Plus it's good for just general all around travel.  It's nice to have a manly clunky heavy watch you know that'll stand up to some man abuse and look nice doing so. 

USS Kittiwake becomes a dive attraction in Grand Cayman

Part of the allure for the Caribbean, for me at least, are the warm waters of the Caribbean sea.   In most places it's so clear and blue it makes it feel like you're swimming in a fish tank.  They're a lot of great places to dive, most natural, some man-made.

(The USS Kittiwake slipped into the sea in just 60 seconds)

Enter the USS Kittiwake, a 251-foot, 2,200-ton Navy submarine rescue ship built in 1945.   It served our country proud for decades and even found the black box off the unfortunate Challenger space shuttle disaster.  Kittiwake has now become the first US Navy ship donated to another country.   How was it donated?  Last month it was sunk 800 yards off off the north end of Grand Cayman's fabled Seven Mile Beach.



View Larger Map


Now the former Navy ship is sitting under 60 feet of those famed warm blue Caribbean waters as a dive site.  Parts of the ship come within 5 feet of the surface so even the snorkelers can get in on the action.  If you want to check out the site both divers and snorkelers can book a tour with prices that run about $60 per person for a snorkel excursion or $100 for a one-tank dive, which includes the marine park fee.
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