The more things change ...
Anthony Gambrill, Contributor
Recently, Claudia Robinson was in Jamaica for the 100th birthday of her indestructible aunt, and a few veterans of the satirical revue series 8 O'clock Jamaica Time (1965-1999) sat around swapping memories. Claudia, now resident in New York, was the star comic actress in several shows. Of course, what came up was, "When are we going to have another 8 O'clock?"
As writer/producer, I had once again to explain that our audiences from the past were now staying home at night watching cable television. Furthermore, situations that had been satirised several times over 13 editions of the show were still being repeated. As the saying goes, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
It struck me that maybe that point needed to be proven in the current era of national debt exchanges, spiralling taxes, and politicians' regurgitated panaceas.
For instance, a JLP-era piece began:
It gives me great pleasure this afternoon
To talk to you, gentlemen and ladies of the press.
Expenditure has shown an unprecedented boom,
And income for the year is considerably less.
I'd like to say it once that our way is very clear,
The majority of you can now relax.
The lower-income bracket may see a slight increase
But the middle class, as usual, will pay much more in tax.
The principle's an old one but the application new
As my colleagues here will help me to explain.
Since most of our new taxes affect relatively few
My majority is still quite safe, even if they do complain.
We've taken up the challenge
To make the Budget balance
And stabilise the national economy.
More tax - less pay
The Seaga Way
You like it - we tax it.
TAXES DILEMMA
On another occasion, titled Taxing Time, we suggested how one could overcome the more-taxes dilemma:
Austerity precedes prosperity
And prosperous we ain't
It's time to tighten our belts again
And tighten them till we faint
Put your noses to the grindstone
The walls are to your backs
And as your wages increase
The more they'll take in tax.
Work night and day and weekends
Work overtime, too, and
If you can work in your sleep
They'll tax it when you do.
The fact is
The taxes
Are all you're working for
A house, a car, a trip abroad
Aren't possible anymore.
Have two jobs instead of one
Maybe you could take three
And should you take a holiday
They'll tax it while you spree.
Work on public holidays
Skip coffee breaks and tea
Sick leave isn't possible
They'll tax your time that's free.
The fact is
The taxman
Is nothing but bad news
He has to pay the IMF so
He's IMF-ing you.
Our advice to anyone who was looking for an answer to the crisis went like this:
Form a committee
Hire a consultant
Sign up for a seminar
But don't do no work.
Get on a task force
Hold a prayer meeting
Call on the Gee Gee
But don't do no work
Join a trade mission
Do some fact-finding
Visit Korea
But don't work
Fill up a long form
Stand in a long line
Lean on a long desk
BUT DON'T DO NOT WORK
Reach for the telephone
Make countless appointments
Write dozens of memos
BUT DON'T DO NO WORK
Get letters of credit
Commitment and indemnity
Without rancour or enmity
BUT DON'T DO NO WORK
If you never make a decision, nobody can ever say you are wrong, the perfect mantra for a political leader as we pointed out.
Give me a platform
Give me a podium
Give me a village square
Or an auditorium
I will talk and argue,
I'll discuss and debate,
Analyse and assess,
Definitively state
And whenever it is possible
I will seize the opportunity to pontificate.
Give me a pulpit
A public meeting
The Pegasus ballroom
wall-to-wall seating.
I'm a problem solver
I'll tell you what to do
Advise and assist
But one thing is true
Please don't ask me to get involved
Because, as usual, I'm leaving it up to you.
Give me a classroom
A congregation
Put me on radio
To speak to the nation.
Give me a courtroom
School graduation
A JMA banquet
To give an oration.
I prize my opinion
I know it all
And I'll tell you so.
But, please, never call
On me to have to do what I say
If I have to make a decision, I'll certainly stall.
STORIES IN GRAFFITI
For the impending election of 1980, we looked to street graffiti for our themes and the inevitability of the saying that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Michael is a fruitcake
Seaga a CIA
Trevor is a Commie
What a choice on election day!
I've got a vote, I've got a vote
I'll make my own selection
I've got a voice to make a choice
In the next general election
But who will it be to represent me
Who'll be my ultimate leader
Who is the man with the 5-year plan
Who'll be the best succeeder?
Michael is a fruitcake
Seaga a CIA
Trevor is a Commie
What a choice on election day!
Can you say who is best for you,
And for me and every Jamaican?
Give me a guess who is the best
I'm going to the polling station
It's time for a change, a true exchange
Of new for old ideas
Someone who'll be for both you and me
Someone who'll not reduce us to tears
Michael is a fruitcake
Seaga a CIA
Trevor is a Commie
What more is there to say!
Well, it turned out that Michael Manley wasn't a fruitcake, Eddie Seaga wasn't a CIA, and Trevor Munroe may have been far to the left for a while, but was never a Commie.
Apart from that, all of the above - relentlessly repeated - has been the story of a nation on a mission for 50 years. The more things have changed, the more they've stayed the same.
Anthony Gambrill is an author and playwright. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com.

