Dear Editor,
I find it really laughable that Andrew Holness has been one of the few high-profile people singled out in relation to perceived living above their visible means to the extent that he has to respond publicly about the home he is building for him and his family.
I say laughable because of the many other people who live lifestyles which would appear beyond their readily identifiable means, and yet there is very little outcry about how they manage to live the way they do.
Well, in my view, Holness has answered his critics in a manner that, for me, should put this matter to rest.
On a totally unrelated matter, I saw in the news a few days ago that oil from the fairly newly minted Digicel building in downtown Kingston seeped into the harbour.
If I am not mistaken, this building was touted as the "greenest" to be constructed in Jamaica. I can only imagine that it must be a case of a little "green" oil that made its way into the harbour.
Stephen Harrison
St Mary
stepharrison28@gmail.com
Building affairs
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I find it really laughable that Andrew Holness has been one of the few high-profile people singled out in relation to perceived living above their visible means to the extent that he has to respond publicly about the home he is building for him and his family.
I say laughable because of the many other people who live lifestyles which would appear beyond their readily identifiable means, and yet there is very little outcry about how they manage to live the way they do.
Well, in my view, Holness has answered his critics in a manner that, for me, should put this matter to rest.
On a totally unrelated matter, I saw in the news a few days ago that oil from the fairly newly minted Digicel building in downtown Kingston seeped into the harbour.
If I am not mistaken, this building was touted as the "greenest" to be constructed in Jamaica. I can only imagine that it must be a case of a little "green" oil that made its way into the harbour.
Stephen Harrison
St Mary
stepharrison28@gmail.com
Building affairs
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